Sticker Hello SG 553
About Sticker Hello SG 553
Sticker Hello SG 553 depicts the SG 553 as a cheerful cartoon-style character with a simple, playful illustration. Its lighthearted treatment of the rifle gives this sticker a more humorous look than most weapon-themed stickers in CS2.
Release & Source
The Sticker Hello SG 553 can be found in the Recoil Sticker Collection.
The Sticker Hello SG 553 is a High Grade-tier sticker with an estimated drop chance of ~80% per capsule, making it one of the more common stickers in CS2.
Popularity
Community Rating
The Sticker Hello SG 553 has a community rating of 4.2 out of 5 based on 16 votes on SkinSwap.
Frequently Asked Questions
Sticker Hello SG 553 is part of the Hello sticker series and the standard version is the regular paper-style release from the Recoil Sticker Collection. There is no separate Gold variant for this specific sticker in the usual tournament-autograph sense. If you want a similar premium look, players usually pair it with gold-accent weapon finishes rather than looking for a gold edition of the sticker itself.
Yes. Valve released several stickers in the same Hello series for different weapons, including Sticker Hello AWP, Sticker Hello MP9, Sticker Hello UMP-45, Sticker Hello XM1014, Sticker Hello CZ75-Auto, and Sticker Hello Galil AR. They all use the same simple greeting-style concept, so they work well if you want a themed loadout across multiple guns.
Sticker Hello SG 553 fits best on clean SG 553 finishes where the graphic stays readable, such as SG 553 Ol' Rusty for contrast, SG 553 Anodized Navy for a simple blue base, or SG 553 Pulse for a brighter custom look. It also works on neutral rifles with open sticker space if you want to keep the Hello-series theme across your inventory.
Yes, especially if you like building around matching weapon-specific stickers instead of a single tournament team or autograph. You can combine Sticker Hello SG 553 with Sticker Hello AWP, Sticker Hello MP9, and Sticker Hello UMP-45 to create a consistent multi-weapon set. The appeal is the shared naming style rather than rarity or scrape effects.

