P250 Mint Kimono
About P250 Mint Kimono
P250 Mint Kimono features a pale mint and white finish covered in a repeating geometric pattern inspired by traditional textile motifs. On the P250, this all-over spray-painted design gives the pistol a cleaner, more ornamental look than many utilitarian finishes for the weapon.
Release & Source
The P250 Mint Kimono can be found in the The Rising Sun Collection.
Float Range & Wear
The P250 Mint Kimono 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.
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Frequently Asked Questions
P250 Mint Kimono works best with clean red, white, and black sticker designs that match its Japanese-inspired geometric pattern. Good options include the Rising Sun-style look of Team EnVyUs (Katowice 2015), the red accents of Natus Vincere (Katowice 2015), the simple contrast of Ace Clutch Co. (Holo), and the brushstroke style of Killjoy. If you want a more themed craft, combine 3x Killjoy with 1x Ace Clutch Co. (Holo) for a balanced red-and-white layout.
P250 Mint Kimono uses a pattern-based finish, so the placement and balance of its red, white, green, and black geometric sections can shift between pattern seeds. Unlike skins with named tiers such as Case Hardened blue gems, Mint Kimono patterns are mostly judged by visual preference rather than a widely accepted ranking system. Most buyers look for cleaner front-side symmetry or stronger red-and-white panel placement.
There is no single universally recognized best pattern for P250 Mint Kimono, because the market does not treat its seeds as top-tier collectibles in the same way as Case Hardened or Fade variants. In practice, the most desirable examples usually have a cleaner geometric layout on the play side with more visible red and white and fewer muddier green-heavy sections. If you are choosing between listings, compare the in-game inspect view rather than relying on the seed number alone.
P250 Kintsugi and P250 Mint Kimono both draw from Japanese-inspired visual themes, but they look very different in-game. Kintsugi has a dark cracked-lacquer style with gold fracture lines, while Mint Kimono uses brighter geometric blocks in red, white, green, and black. If you want a louder pattern-based finish, Mint Kimono fits better; if you want a more restrained black-and-gold look, Kintsugi is the closer choice.

