Glock-18 Clear Polymer
(Battle-Scarred)About Glock-18 Clear Polymer
The Glock-18 Clear Polymer pairs a tan slide with a blue trigger and controls, while the frame is rendered in transparent polymer that reveals the pistol’s internal shapes. This understated industrial treatment gives the Glock-18 a more utilitarian, component-focused look than most pistol skins in CS2.
Release & Source
The Glock-18 Clear Polymer can be found in the Snakebite Case. The Glock-18 Clear Polymer is part of the Clear Polymer family.
Float Range & Wear
The Glock-18 Clear Polymer is available in all conditions, from Factory New to Battle-Scarred. The higher the float value, the more scratches and wear will be visible on the skin.
The Glock-18 Clear Polymer is a Mil Spec Grade-tier skin with an estimated drop chance of ~79.92%, making it one of the more common Glock-18 skins in CS2.
Popularity
Community Rating
Frequently Asked Questions
Glock-18 Clear Polymer works best with stickers that match its tan, blue, and transparent frame details. Good options include Battle Scarred (Holo), Miami Skill Surf (Holo), Blue Gem (Glitter), and The Pro (Foil) for blue accents, or Desert Eagle (Gold) and Nuke Beast (Foil) if you want to lean into the tan industrial look. Clean single-sticker placements usually suit this skin better than covering the clear frame effect.
Glock-18 Clear Polymer is a Mil-Spec Grade skin from the Snakebite Collection, so it sits in the lower rarity tiers compared with Restricted, Classified, and Covert Glock finishes. That means it is relatively common from Snakebite Case openings and on the market, especially in non-StatTrak versions. Its availability is much higher than Glock skins like Gamma Doppler, Bullet Queen, or Franklin.
The real Glock 18 is a selective-fire machine pistol, not the semi-automatic Glock 17 or Glock 19 commonly sold to civilians. In the United States, civilian ownership of newly manufactured fully automatic firearms is heavily restricted under federal law, which is why the Glock 18 is generally illegal for civilian purchase. In CS2, that legal status has no gameplay effect and only relates to the real firearm inspiration behind the skin.
Yes. The Clear Polymer finish is one of the few Glock skins where the transparent-frame concept is part of the visual identity, and that extends to how the lower body and magazine area read in-game. The magazine does not behave differently, but the skin’s see-through styling gives the pistol a more technical, stripped-back look than finishes like Candy Apple, Oxide Blaze, or Moonrise.

