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Slö Cannon / July 11, 2026 / 7 min read

AWP Asiimov in 2026: Why It's So Float-Sensitive and What You Should Pay

AWP Asiimov in 2026: Why It's So Float-Sensitive and What You Should Pay

The AWP Asiimov is one of CS2's most recognizable skins and one of the most float-sensitive items in the entire market. The white tactical body shows wear so dramatically across the float range that the same skin in the same wear tier can look almost pristine or noticeably scratched depending on a few hundredths of decimal difference. For buyers, understanding the Asiimov's float behavior is the difference between getting a clean-looking skin and getting one that looks worse than the price suggests.

Quick answer

The AWP Asiimov is a Covert-tier skin from the Operation Phoenix Weapon Case, featuring white tactical body panels with orange and black accents. The white panels accumulate visible wear aggressively as float increases, making this one of CS2's most float-sensitive skins. Pricing in 2026 ranges from approximately $40 (high-float Battle-Scarred) to $1,500+ (sub-0.01 float Factory New StatTrak). Low-float Factory New examples command significant premium over standard FN floats. The Asiimov doesn't exist in Minimal Wear — its wear range skips that tier, going from Factory New directly to Field-Tested in most generated instances.

What is the AWP Asiimov?

The AWP Asiimov is one of the most iconic AWP skins in CS2's history. Released in 2014 as part of the Operation Phoenix Weapon Case, the design pairs a predominantly white body with bright orange accents and black detail panels. The aesthetic is futuristic and tactical — the kind of design that stands out clearly on the kill cam and in inspect screens.

The Asiimov visual style has been applied to other CS2 weapons (AK-47 Asiimov, M4A4 Asiimov, P90 Asiimov, and others), creating a family of related skins. The AWP Asiimov is the most-cited and typically the highest-valued of the Asiimov family due to the AWP's prestige as the game's premier sniper rifle.

Why is the AWP Asiimov so float-sensitive?

The design's heavy use of white panels is the core reason. White surfaces show wear, scratches, and scuffs much more visibly than darker colors. Even minor wear creates contrast against the clean white base, making the skin look distinctly more worn at moderate floats than it would on a darker-color design.

Specific float behaviors on the AWP Asiimov:

Sub-0.01 Factory New: the white panels appear pristine and clean. Orange accents are vibrant. This is the visual ideal of the skin and what collectors specifically target.

0.01–0.04 Factory New: still very clean but slight wear edges become detectable on close inspection. Visually still excellent but technically not the "ultimate" Factory New examples.

0.04–0.07 Factory New: visible micro-scratches and edge wear become noticeable. Still Factory New by tier classification, but distinctly less clean than sub-0.01 examples.

Field-Tested (0.15–0.38): visible scratches, edge wear, and surface texture changes are clearly apparent. The skin still reads as Asiimov but the white panels show distinct wear patterns. This is what most non-collector owners encounter when buying without float verification.

Well-Worn and Battle-Scarred: significant visible damage to the white panels. The skin still functions as Asiimov but the worn aesthetic is dominant rather than the original clean design.

The dramatic visual progression across the float range explains why Factory New Asiimovs command significant premium over Field-Tested. The difference isn't just statistical — it's visually obvious.

What wear tiers does the AWP Asiimov exist in?

The AWP Asiimov's wear range is restricted — it doesn't span the full 0.00 to 1.00 float range. The specific wear range skips Minimal Wear, meaning AWP Asiimovs only exist in Factory New, Field-Tested, Well-Worn, and Battle-Scarred.

This wear range characteristic affects several practical considerations:

  • Searching for "AWP Asiimov Minimal Wear" returns no results because no instances of this tier exist

  • Trade-up contracts producing the AWP Asiimov as an output never produce Minimal Wear examples

  • The jump from Factory New (up to 0.07) directly to Field-Tested (starting at 0.18 for this specific skin's wear range) means there's a meaningful visual gap between the cleanest and second-cleanest available tiers

This wear range restriction adds value to the Factory New tier specifically — there's no "middle option" between FN and FT, which concentrates demand on whichever side of that gap a buyer chooses.

What's the pricing breakdown for AWP Asiimov in 2026?

General pricing ranges:

Battle-Scarred: approximately $40–$80. Entry-tier Asiimov ownership with significant visible wear.

Well-Worn: approximately $70–$150. Less common than BS but represents the moderately-worn tier.

Field-Tested: approximately $200–$400 depending on specific float within the tier. The most-traded wear tier. Lower-float FT (sub-0.20) trades higher than higher-float FT (above 0.35).

Factory New: $500–$1,500+ depending on specific float. Sub-0.01 FN commands the highest absolute prices. Standard FN floats (0.03–0.06) trade lower but still well above Field-Tested.

StatTrak variants add 30–60% premium across all wear tiers. StatTrak Factory New AWP Asiimov is a recognized collector item with limited supply within the broader Asiimov population.

Applied stickers significantly affect Asiimov pricing. The skin's design is generally accommodating to coherent sticker crafts due to the visible panels and clear color palette. Tactical-themed sticker combinations (orange or futuristic stickers matching the Asiimov aesthetic) can add craft premium. Random or mismatched stickers can decrease value vs the clean equivalent.

What about other Asiimov variants?

The Asiimov design exists on multiple CS2 weapons:

AK-47 Asiimov: the second-most-prominent Asiimov. Similar float sensitivity to the AWP variant. Pricing is lower than AWP Asiimov but still significantly affected by float position within wear tier.

M4A4 Asiimov: similar visual style and float sensitivity. Less prestigious than AK or AWP Asiimov but still a recognized item.

P90 Asiimov: lower-tier weapon (P90 is generally less prestige-laden than AK or AWP). Pricing reflects the underlying weapon's market position.

Other weapon Asiimov variants: exist across the Asiimov family with varying pricing based on the underlying weapon and supply.

For buyers interested in the Asiimov aesthetic specifically, the AWP variant is the prestige tier. The AK-47 Asiimov is the popular mid-tier choice. Other variants exist for budget-conscious buyers wanting the Asiimov look without AK or AWP prices.

How do I verify AWP Asiimov float before buying?

Float verification is particularly important for Asiimov purchases due to the dramatic visual impact of small float differences.

On third-party platforms: CSFloat displays float prominently on every listing. Skinport, SkinSwap, and BUFF163 also surface float information. Use these platforms specifically for float-sensitive purchases.

On Steam Community Market: install the CSFloat browser extension to display float values inside Steam listings. For purchases above $200, verify float through the inspect link or third-party tools.

For Factory New purchases: always check the specific float number, not just the wear tier label. A 0.005 FN Asiimov and a 0.065 FN Asiimov are vastly different items at vastly different fair prices, despite sharing the FN tier classification.

Visual verification: use the in-game inspect functionality or platform inspect tools to actually see the skin before committing. With Asiimov's dramatic float-to-visual mapping, listings that look fine in photos can look noticeably different in actual inspection.

Where should I buy the AWP Asiimov?

The platform choice depends on what you're prioritizing:

For attribute-specific purchases (low-float FN): CSFloat is the strongest platform. The float and sticker tooling makes finding the exact item you want practical, and the community concentration includes serious Asiimov collectors.

For standard mid-tier purchases (Field-Tested, casual Factory New): Skinport offers broad inventory at competitive pricing. Steam Community Market works fine but at higher prices.

For top-tier purchases (StatTrak FN, low-float StatTrak): BUFF163 typically has the deepest global inventory. CSFloat as the Western alternative with strong attribute tooling.

For trade-in scenarios: SkinSwap supports trade-ins targeting AWP Asiimovs from platform inventory. The trade-in flow works best for standard wear tiers; top-tier low-float StatTrak items are inconsistently available on counterparty platforms.

For instant cashout when selling: SkinSwap, Tradeit.gg, and other counterparty platforms for fast execution. P2P listings on Skinport or CSFloat for maximum return on individual sales.

Frequently asked questions

Frequently asked questions

Why is the AWP Asiimov Factory New so much more expensive than Field-Tested?
The Asiimov's white panels show wear dramatically across float ranges. A Factory New looks distinctly cleaner than a Field-Tested, and the visual gap is more pronounced than on most CS2 skins. Pricing reflects this visible difference — Factory New commands premium because it looks noticeably better.
What's the lowest float AWP Asiimov ever seen?
Sub-0.001 floats exist on the AWP Asiimov but are extremely rare due to the skin's wear range minimum. The lowest commonly-traded floats are in the 0.001–0.003 range, with values approaching 0.001 commanding the highest absolute prices.
Is the AWP Asiimov a good first AWP skin?
Depends on budget. For buyers in the $200–$400 range, a Field-Tested Asiimov is a recognizable first AWP. For buyers prioritizing visual cleanness, the Factory New tier ($500+) offers a meaningful upgrade. The Asiimov is one of the most-recognized AWP skins, so it's a defensible first AWP purchase regardless of tier.
Does the AWP Asiimov exist in Minimal Wear?
No. The AWP Asiimov's wear range skips the Minimal Wear tier. Available wear tiers are Factory New, Field-Tested, Well-Worn, and Battle-Scarred.
Are AWP Asiimov prices stable?
The Asiimov has been one of the more stable AWP skins in pricing over multi-year windows. The Operation Phoenix Weapon Case is discontinued, so supply is constrained relative to active-case skins. Demand from new players entering CS2 maintains pricing pressure. Specific volatility happens around game updates and Major tournaments but the longer-term trend has been gradual appreciation.
Should I buy the AWP Asiimov or the AWP Dragon Lore?
Different price tiers and collector categories. The AWP Asiimov is accessible mid-tier collecting ($200–$1,500 range). The Dragon Lore is top-tier collecting ($2,000–$50,000+ range). They're complementary rather than competitive choices. Most serious AWP collectors aspire to both eventually.

Sources

Slö Cannon

Slö Cannon

Hey, I'm Slö Cannon — part trader, part writer, full-time skin market addict. I've spent years deep in CS2 and Rust, flipping skins, tracking prices, and publishing more guides than most people care to read. If there's a trend, edge, or inefficiency in the market, I'm probably already writing about it.