
Estádio das Rãs
About Estádio das Rãs
Estádio das Rãs is the original Lúcioball arena and the first seasonal event map ever added to Overwatch. Set in Rio de Janeiro — the hometown of Lucio Correia dos Santos — this fictional enclosed soccer stadium serves as the primary stage for Lúcioball matches during the Summer Games event every year.
The arena blends the energy of a real Brazilian football stadium with Overwatch's futuristic aesthetic. Speed-boost walls line the perimeter, jump pads dot the arena floor, and in the distance, the unmistakable silhouette of a Vishkar Corporation tower rises over the Rio skyline — a subtle nod to Lucio's origins and his complicated relationship with the corporation that dominated his neighborhood.
Lúcioball — How It Works
Lúcioball is a 3v3 soccer-style brawl exclusive to the Summer Games event. All players are locked to Lucio and must use his abilities to control and shoot an oversized ball into the opponent's goal. There are no weapons — only Soundwave (right-click), speed boosts, and wall rides.
Scoring
Score the most goals in 4 minutes. In overtime, the next goal wins the match instantly.
Mercy Rule
A team wins immediately if they build a lead of more than 5 goals before time expires.
Arena Layout
Jump Pads
Scattered around the arena floor, jump pads launch you skyward for aerial shots. Master the arc to score from unexpected angles.
Speed Walls
Touch the glowing speed-boost walls to accelerate rapidly — essential for quick transitions from defense to offense.
Open Field
Estádio das Rãs has the most open layout of the three Lúcioball arenas, rewarding long-range curved shots and fast breaks.
Daytime Setting
The bright daytime visibility makes tracking the ball straightforward — perfect for learning the Lúcioball format.
Trivia & History
- Released on August 2, 2016 — the 13th map added to Overwatch
- First of the three Lúcioball arenas ever introduced
- Set in Lucio's hometown of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- A Vishkar Corporation building is visible on the city skyline in the distance
- Brazil's in-universe flag matches the real-world flag, confirmed on this map's loading screen
- Philippe Maia voices the announcer in both English and Brazilian Portuguese versions
- Matches last four minutes; overtime ends the moment one team scores
- Teams win by scoring the most goals or by leading by more than 5 points
