Destiny 2 developer Bungie is facing accusations that an Iron Banner armor set promised on September 9 was instead placed in the Eververse Store for real-money sale. The claim matters because players expected the set as an activity reward, not a microtransaction-only item.
The controversy began when the Destiny 2 team announced the return of the Iron Banner PvP mode, saying it would include “with new weapons to earn and an incredibly cool new set of armor.” A few days later the official reveal described the new pieces as a reprised armor, essentially a reskin of older gear rather than a fresh design. Players noticed a mismatch between the early promise and the item that appeared in Eververse, and that gap is what has driven the criticism.
Concept artist Ben Low posted the original Gladius Titan art on ArtStation, and the community quickly compared it to the Eververse listing. The concept includes the Iron Banner tree sigil and the event’s fiery glow;,the Eververse model closely matches that art aside from the emblem. Those visual similarities are a central part of the complaint: players argue the set looked like an Iron Banner reward during development but ended up behind a paywall.
Several Reddit comments have crystallized the reaction. One user wrote that Bungie is “milking the cow dry” in a thread that circulated widely (Venaixis94). Another said the studio seems willing to burn goodwill to keep revenue flowing (yesitmework), and a separate commenter accused leadership of preferring Eververse sales over earnable armor (Assassinite9). A fourth user noted that the company once overcorrected during past slumps but appears silent now (Schallhorn16).
The thread also referenced an earlier report that leadership worried earnable Trials armor might undercut Eververse sales. Those concerns add context to why players read the Gladius case as a deliberate business call rather than an accident. The Eververse listing shows the set priced at 1,500 Silver, about $15 per character, which is the concrete figure feeding much of the backlash.
There is one crucial caveat, early previews reportedly included the Gladius pieces in the in-game collection and not as Iron Banner items, which suggests the decision to put them in Eververse might predate public messaging. The timeline is messy, and at present, the claim that Bungie intentionally moved the set remains unconfirmed. Bungie has not published a public clarification about this specific armor placement.
Share your thoughts in the comments and follow the conversation on X and Bluesky.