Sticker DavCost (Foil) Cluj-Napoca 2015
About Sticker DavCost Cluj-Napoca 2015
Sticker DavCost Cluj-Napoca 2015 features the autograph of professional player DavCost in a handwritten style, rendered in metallic gold on a transparent sticker background. As a tournament sticker from Cluj-Napoca 2015, it stands out through its player-specific signature design rather than a team logo or illustrated graphic.
Release & Source
The Sticker DavCost Cluj-Napoca 2015 can be found in the Autograph Capsule | Flipsid3 Tactics | Cluj-Napoca 2015.
The Sticker DavCost (Foil) Cluj-Napoca 2015 is a Exotic-tier sticker with an estimated drop chance of ~4.5% per capsule, making it one of the rarest stickers in CS2.
Popularity
Community Rating
The Sticker DavCost Cluj-Napoca 2015 has a community rating of 4.0 out of 5 based on 3 votes on SkinSwap.
Frequently Asked Questions
DavCost is a Ukrainian professional Counter-Strike player who attended DreamHack Open Cluj-Napoca 2015. This sticker represents his tournament autograph from that event. Collectors usually value it as part of mid-2010s Major sticker lineups and player autograph crafts.
Its appeal comes from being tied to a specific 2015 Major event and a named player autograph rather than a generic team sticker. Cluj-Napoca 2015 stickers are from an older tournament capsule era, so they attract collectors building event-themed inventories. Demand is usually strongest from autograph collectors and players making period-correct crafts.
Because this autograph sticker uses a clean tournament style, it fits well on darker or neutral finishes that keep the signature readable. Good options include AK-47 Redline, M4A4 Asiimov, AWP Redline, and USP-S Orion. If you want a 2015-style craft, using multiple Cluj-Napoca 2015 autographs on the same weapon keeps the theme consistent.
It can appeal to collectors of older Major autographs, but sticker prices depend heavily on player recognition, available supply, and crafting demand. DavCost is more niche than names like kennyS or olofmeister, so growth is usually driven by event scarcity rather than broad mainstream demand. It makes more sense as a collection piece or themed craft item than as a purely liquidity-focused hold.

