Sticker Hobbit Rio 2022
About Sticker Hobbit Rio 2022
Sticker Hobbit Rio 2022 features a stylized autograph from Hobbit presented on a tournament-themed sticker design for the Rio 2022 Major. As an autograph sticker rather than a weapon finish, it is defined by the player signature and event branding rather than artwork tied to a specific gun.
Release & Source
The Sticker Hobbit Rio 2022 can be found in the Rio 2022 Challengers Autograph Capsule.
The Sticker Hobbit Rio 2022 is a Exotic-tier sticker with an estimated drop chance of ~80% per capsule, making it one of the more common stickers in CS2.
Popularity
Community Rating
Frequently Asked Questions
Sticker Hobbit Rio 2022 represents Abay "Hobbit" Khassenov during the IEM Rio 2022 Major period, when he was playing for Cloud9. That makes it part of the Rio 2022 Challengers autograph set rather than a team logo sticker. Collectors often group it with other Cloud9 player autographs from the same event.
The main difference is the tournament branding and autograph artwork used for each Major. Sticker Hobbit Rio 2022 uses the Rio 2022 event design, while the Stockholm 2021 version has the earlier Major’s visual style and capsule source. Buyers usually compare them based on signature readability, border style, and how well each one fits a specific craft.
Because this sticker uses a clean autograph style with Rio event branding, it works well on darker or neutral finishes where the signature stays readable. Good options include AK-47 Slate, USP-S Ticket to Hell, M4A1-S Night Terror, and Glock-18 Neo-Noir if you want a craft with more contrast. On lighter skins, placement matters more so the autograph does not blend into the base finish.
It can work well in autograph crafts if you want a player-specific sticker tied to the Rio 2022 Major rather than a flashy holo-heavy look. It is most useful on weapons with open sticker positions such as the AK-47 Slate, Desert Eagle Printstream, or M4A4 Magnesium where the signature remains clear. Its appeal depends more on Hobbit fan interest and event-specific collecting than on broad visual demand.

