Specialist Gloves Buckshot
(Battle-Scarred)About Specialist Gloves Buckshot
★ Specialist Gloves Buckshot are specialist gloves with a hunting-inspired palette, combining muted green, brown, and tan panels with a camouflaged fabric back. Reinforced knuckle armor, padded finger segments, and stitched leather construction give the Buckshot finish a practical field-use look that differs from more graphic or brightly colored Specialist Gloves designs.
Release & Source
The Specialist Gloves Buckshot can be found in the Clutch Case and Revolution Case.
Float Range & Wear
The Specialist Gloves Buckshot 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 Specialist Gloves Buckshot is a Extraordinary-tier skin with an estimated drop chance of ~0.64%, making it one of the rarest Specialist Gloves skins in CS2.
Popularity
Community Rating
Frequently Asked Questions
Safari Mesh knives are the most natural match because their tan and brown palette lines up with the Buckshot camo. A Survival Knife Safari Mesh, Huntsman Knife Boreal Forest, or Classic Knife Forest DDPAT all keep the same muted outdoor look without introducing bright colors that clash.
Weapon finishes with earthy greens, browns, and tan accents fit these gloves best. Good matches include the AK-47 Safari Mesh, Galil AR Hunting Blind, AUG Contractor, FAMAS Survivor Z, and SSG 08 Detour. For pistols, the Five-SeveN Scumbria and P250 Iron Clad also work with the glove’s practical hunting theme.
If you want a coordinated loadout around Specialist Gloves Buckshot, pair them with knives that use forest, tan, or mesh finishes rather than bright Doppler or Fade patterns. Strong options include a Nomad Knife Safari Mesh, Bowie Knife Boreal Forest, or Flip Knife Forest DDPAT. These combinations keep the loadout grounded in military and hunting-inspired colors.
No. Specialist Gloves Buckshot do not have pattern-based tiers in the way skins like Case Hardened or Fade do. The finish is judged more by wear level and how clean the fabric and leather panels look, not by a rare seed or special pattern placement.

