Call of Duty Black Ops 7's Endgame campaign introduces weapon camo challenges that players unlock through standard progression. The camos reward completion of specific in-game objectives tied to individual weapons across campaign missions.

Activision continues its yearly formula with minimal innovation. The camo system itself remains functional but uninspired. Players who want cosmetic variety need to grind through predetermined challenge lists rather than experimenting freely. This approach locks cosmetics behind time investment instead of skill or creativity.

Black Ops 7 launches with the expected annual refresh. New year, new Call of Duty, same old stuff. The campaign delivers competent shooting mechanics and story beats, but the progression systems feel designed more for engagement metrics than player enjoyment.

The camo unlock structure works fine for completionists. Casual players will earn cosmetics naturally by finishing missions. The real issue sits elsewhere. Activision prioritizes battle pass monetization and cosmetic store items over meaningful cosmetic depth. Free camos exist, but the best visual upgrades sit behind paywalls in nearly every modern Call of Duty.

Black Ops 7 plays it safe. The Endgame campaign camos represent competent design that serves the game's existing player base without pushing boundaries or taking risks.