Fracture Case
$0.46
$0.94
-68.17%
5.51%
4.94%
69
Contents
Rarity, price and probability breakdown for every possible outcome.
Rare Special Item
$354.23
covert
$52.93
classified
$7.05
restricted
$1.32
milspec
$0.22
Search items, tools…
Last updated:
Review Fracture Case case price, key cost, opening odds, total opening cost, expected value, expected profit/loss, profit chance, Unbox ROI, Investing ROI and full contents data in one research view.
$0.46
$0.94
-68.17%
5.51%
4.94%
69
Rarity, price and probability breakdown for every possible outcome.
Rare Special Item
$354.23
covert
$52.93
classified
$7.05
restricted
$1.32
milspec
$0.22
Review Fracture Case case price, key cost, opening odds, total opening cost, expected value, expected profit/loss, profit chance, Unbox ROI, Investing ROI and full contents data in one research view.
The detail view brings Fracture Case cost, EV, ROI, profit chance and contents together before you test short-run variance in the simulator.
Opening cost combines the unopened case price and key cost. Read total cost before judging EV or Unbox ROI.
The contents view lists possible drops with rarity, average price and probability so rare outcomes do not hide common-result risk.
Unbox ROI describes the opening model. Investing ROI describes the unopened case as a market item. They should be read separately.
This page focuses on one case instead of a list. It connects price, key cost, EV, profit chance, contents and update timing so the research is specific to Fracture Case.
Case contents should be read by probability and value together. Expensive outputs can dominate expected value while still being rare.
Case research often starts with knife or glove questions. Use the contents table to see which Gold-tier outcomes exist in Fracture Case, how rare they are, and how much they move expected value.
The simulator helps visualize variance, but Details remains the source for long-run EV and contents context.
Expected value and ROI for Fracture Case depend on the marketplace data CS Profit pulls from. When major skins move, the Fracture Case research columns update on the next refresh cycle, so researchers should re-check the case before any action.
Single-session outcomes do not represent long-run expectation. CS Profit's Fracture Case page separates EV, profit chance and the contents table so researchers can avoid common mistakes like chasing losses or assuming a recent pull proves an edge.
CS2 case research usually moves across multiple cases at once. Popular cases like the Fracture Case, Fever Case, Revolution Case, Dreams and Nightmares Case, Snakebite Case, Kilowatt Case, Clutch Case and Spectrum Case are frequently tracked next to Fracture Case for expected value, drop pool and ROI comparison. The same data-driven research approach applies to Fracture Case as to the rest of the CS2 case ecosystem.
It is a modeled average output value based on Fracture Case drop odds and current market reference prices.
It compares modeled opening value with total opening cost. It is an estimate, not a guaranteed outcome.
It tracks holding logic for the unopened case and should not be mixed with opening ROI.
No. Contents show the possible drop pool and probabilities; real openings are random.
CS Profit refreshes case data on a regular schedule. The last-updated timestamp on the page shows when the numbers were last pulled from the marketplace.
It depends on the skin's market price relative to opening cost. Buying the skin directly is often cleaner than relying on a random drop.
The Cases page lists Fracture Case, Fever Case, Revolution Case, Dreams and Nightmares Case, Snakebite Case, Kilowatt Case, Clutch Case, Spectrum Case and Fracture Case side by side for expected value, opening cost, profit chance and ROI.
They share the same CS2 case research methodology but have different drop pools, knife and glove exposure, supply status and marketplace price. CS Profit's tracker treats each case as its own data row.