If you play Valorant long enough, you start noticing a pattern. Someone pulls out a knife on the agent select screen, and the whole lobby reacts. Half the time it’s a Reaver or a Prime Karambit. But every once in a while, someone flexes a VCT knife, and that hits different.
VCT knives sit in a weird spot in the Valorant skin economy. They’re not the most expensive melees in the game. They’re not even the flashiest. But ask any serious collector which ones they’d actually fight to keep in their inventory, and the VCT lineup almost always comes up first. Here’s why.
They’re gone the moment the tournament ends
This is the big one. Most Valorant skins come back. If you missed a bundle you liked, you wait a few months and it usually shows up in the Night Market or returns to the store for a featured run. Not VCT skins. When the capsule window closes, that’s it. No re-release, no Night Market appearance, no second chance.
The 2025 VCT Karambit was on sale from February 6 to March 2. After that, gone. The 2026 Season Capsule had its window from February 19 to March 18, 2026. Also gone. If you weren’t there with 5,850 VP ready, you don’t get to own one. Ever.
That kind of hard cutoff is rare in Valorant, and it’s what makes these knives feel like trophies. Pulling a VCT knife in 2026 doesn’t just say “I have a cool skin.” It says “I was here when this dropped.” That’s the part you can’t buy back.
The designs actually mean something
A lot of premium knives in Valorant look amazing but don’t tell a story. The Reaver Karambit looks evil. The Prime Karambit looks clean. Cool, but that’s about it.
VCT knives carry a whole tournament with them. The 2023 LOCK//IN Misericórdia came in four colors representing the international leagues. Red for the base, blue for Pacific, green for Americas, purple for EMEA. The 2025 Karambit pulled the same trick with blue, yellow, orange, and a hidden gray variant that collectors ended up loving the most. Every variant ties back to a specific region, a specific year, a specific moment in Valorant esports history.
If you main an EMEA team and you’ve got the EMEA variant equipped, that’s not just a skin choice. That’s your colors. It’s the closest thing Valorant has to wearing a jersey.
Your money actually does something
This part doesn’t get talked about enough. When you buy a VCT capsule, 50% of the net proceeds get split among VCT partner teams. That’s not marketing language, that’s the actual split Riot has been running since the system started.
By the end of the 2024 season, VCT capsules and the Champions collection had raised $44.3 million for the teams. That’s real money funding the orgs you watch every weekend. Most cosmetic purchases in any game just go to the publisher. With VCT skins, half of what you spend is helping pay salaries, travel, and bootcamps for the players you cheer for.
So when someone pulls a VCT knife, there’s a quiet flex underneath the obvious one. They didn’t just spend money. They actually backed the scene.
They have the best kill effects in the game (debatable, but hear me out)
Champions knives, the cousins of the VCT capsule knives, drop the year’s Champions theme song when you finish someone. The Champions Aura kicks in at level four and changes the whole feel of the weapon. VCT season capsule melees borrow a lot of the same energy. The 2025 Karambit had a glow effect that drew comparisons to the RGX 11z Pro, which is already considered one of the cleanest knives in the game.
When you’re holding a VCT knife, the inspect animation, the equip sound, the kill banner, all of it feels built for the spotlight. Because it kind of was. These are skins designed to look good on stage at Champions.
The community knows what they’re worth
Walk into any Valorant Discord or skin collector subreddit and ask people which limited skins they regret missing the most. VCT knives come up constantly. The 2024 Champions kunai. The 2023 Misericórdia. The 2025 Karambit’s gray variant that nobody knew was hidden in the bundle until they unlocked it.
If you want to see the full lineup of Valorant melees, including every VCT knife that’s ever released, valorantknives.gg has all of them cataloged with visuals, animations, and details on each variant. It’s the easiest way to actually compare what’s out there and figure out which ones you missed.
Should you buy the next one?
Honest answer: if you watch VCT, yes. If you collect skins, definitely yes. If you just want a cool knife and you’re not picky about which one, you can probably find something you like in the regular store rotation for cheaper.
But here’s the thing nobody tells you. The skins you keep pulling out of your inventory three years later aren’t usually the ones that looked the best on release day. They’re the ones tied to a memory. The tournament you watched. The team you backed. The moment in the scene you were there for.





