CS2 Cases Tracker: Compare Case EV, Unbox ROI and Investing ROI
This page is a CS2 case comparison table, not a basic case-opening guide. Users can search cases, compare them against Armory items when needed and review Entry Cost, Expected Value, Exp. Profit, Profit %, Unbox ROI and Investing ROI before choosing what to research next.
A case tracker built for comparison
Users searching for CS2 cases do not only want definitions. They want to compare cases and see which one looks strongest by cost, expected value and ROI. The table should be the main promise of the page.
- -Use Entry Cost to show the real starting cost behind the case opportunity.
- -Use Expected Value and Exp. Profit to show the estimated output profile.
- -Use Unbox ROI for opening logic and Investing ROI for holding logic.
- -Let users filter, search and compare instead of forcing them through long explanation first.
Unbox ROI and Investing ROI must stay separate
A case can look good to hold and still be bad to open. That is why the table needs both Unbox ROI and Investing ROI. Users should see whether the opportunity is driven by opening math, market movement or both.
- -Unbox ROI is tied to expected outcome value and opening cost.
- -Investing ROI is tied to market-price movement for the unopened case.
- -A positive Investing ROI does not make opening profitable.
- -A strong Unbox ROI estimate still depends on odds, liquidity and item prices.
Cases and Armory items in one comparison flow
The shared All, Cases and Armory filters let users compare the broader opportunity pool without losing context. This matters because a user may find that an Armory item has better table metrics than a case, or that a case has stronger liquidity than an Armory reward.
- -Use All for the full opportunity table.
- -Use Cases when the user only wants traditional case comparisons.
- -Use Armory when the user wants reward-based opportunities.
- -Keep the item category visible so the user understands the supply path.
The page promise: choose the best research candidate faster
The strongest positioning is not that CSProfit tells users which case will print money. The real value is that users can compare cases side by side and quickly choose the best candidate for deeper research.
- -Avoid guaranteed-profit language.
- -Explain that expected value is a model estimate, not a payout promise.
- -Make the table metrics visible in copy and structured data.
- -Position CSProfit as a tracker for smarter comparison, not a gambling funnel.
CS2 Cases FAQ — Researched and Updated for 2026
What are cases in CS2?
CS2 cases are cosmetic containers with a defined item pool. When opened, they return one random item from that pool, usually with a key, and the odds are heavily weighted toward lower-rarity skins.
How many CS2 cases are there?
The exact number changes when Valve adds new containers, terminals or case-related content. A serious page should use a live or date-stamped list and separate traditional cases from terminals and Armory containers.
What cases are currently in CS2?
Cases currently in CS2 include active, rare, discontinued and special-source containers. The answer should be based on a current list, not an old CS:GO table copied into a CS2 page.
What cases are currently dropping in CS2?
The current CS2 drop pool can change after Valve updates. In 2026, users should also watch weekly terminals, not only classic cases. A safe page should verify whether a container is active, rare, discontinued, Armory-related or terminal-based before listing it as currently dropping.
What cases currently drop in CS2?
For this phrasing, give the current drop-pool logic: Prime weekly rewards can include containers, but the exact pool needs verification against recent Valve updates and live tracker data.
What cases are still dropping in CS2?