In Endgame, you can bring a solid gun and a tidy perk setup, but it won't carry you once the match starts turning ugly. The real difference comes from Exotic Skills, because they're active tools, not background bonuses. You don't pick them in a menu and stroll in; you chase them while everything's trying to delete you. If you're already planning your route, it helps to think ahead about where you'll fight and when you'll gamble on power, kind of like people do when they queue a CoD BO7 Bot Lobby to warm up mechanics before jumping into the chaos.

Where The Cases Actually Come From

If you want the cleanest path to an Exotic Skill, hunt World Boss Events. Every match has them, and they're the closest thing Endgame has to a promise. Down the boss, grab the Exotic Skill Case, crack it open, and let RNG hand you something that can save a run. Other sources exist, but they feel like side bets: Tier IV contracts can pay out if you've got the nerves, and Elite enemies in high-threat zones sometimes drop cases when you least expect it. You can also poke around caches on the map, but that's the kind of habit that burns time and gets you pinched by a third party.

Boss Chasing Without Throwing Your Run

A lot of players sprint at the boss the moment it pings, then wonder why they get wiped on the way in. Take a breath. Hit it when you've got plates, ammo, and at least one teammate who's actually nearby. If you're solo, be pickier. Clear the outer ring first, grab a vehicle, and approach like you're setting up an exit, not a heroic last stand. And don't ignore the zone. A boss drop isn't worth it if you're limping out with no resources and a swarm on your back. The best runs usually come from treating the boss like a planned stop, not a detour.

Swap Or Upgrade, And Why It Matters

Once you're holding a skill, it sticks with you for the rest of the run, so the next case is a real decision. You can swap to the new ability, or you can upgrade what you're already running so it procs more often or hits harder. For solo players, a self-revive style option like Resurrection can be the difference between a clutch reset and a lobby screen. If you're playing aggressive, crowd control skills like Frost Cloud buy you space when the map starts flooding with enemies. If your squad's already stacked on damage, upgrading a defensive skill might do more work than chasing another flashy attack.

Keeping Your Build Moving

 

The smartest Endgame players stay flexible. If your skill isn't fitting the lobby tempo, ditch it. If you keep winning fights but bleeding resources, upgrade the thing that stabilizes you. And if you're trying to speed up your progression outside the match—currency, items, or quick pickups—some players use marketplaces like RSVSR to save time so they can focus on the part that matters: clean rotations, smart boss timing, and not panicking when the run gets wild.