PUBG Mobile’s Jujutsu Kaisen collab returns with a cursed Prize Path, delivering Megumi and Nobara mythic cosplay sets and more.
Holy cursed energy, Batman! The moment I booted up PUBG Mobile after the 4.3 update, my jaw hit the floor so hard I think I left a dent. That's right, the Jujutsu Kaisen Prize Path is back for round two, and it's absolutely blowing my socks off. Satoru Gojo and his squad are once again tearing up the battlegrounds, and I am here for it. I mean, the devs actually listened to us—shocker, right? After the first JJK collab became the stuff of legend, they resurrected it like a true sorcerer, and this time it’s even more bonkers.

Let’s cut to the chase. The collaboration landed on March 13, 2026, and runs all the way to April 12. For my friends in India, Battlegrounds Mobile India gets its dose on March 19. So basically, we have a full month to grind, swipe, and pray to the PUBG gods that we don’t go broke. The core offering is the Prize Path—a 25-level ladder chock-full of JJK goodies—and a fiendish Lucky Spin that’s already whispering sweet nothings to my wallet.
Now, the Prize Path is the holy grail here. Forget just one mythic outfit; we’ve got two cosplay sets waiting to be unlocked. That’s right: the Megumi Fushiguro Set and the Nobara Kugisaki Set. You can practically hear the oohs and aahs already. But the path isn’t just a one-trick pony. Look at this loot buffet, and try not to drool:
| Level | Sweet, Sweet Reward |
|---|---|
| 1 | Jujutsu Kaisen Pan (whacking enemies with cursed flair) |
| 2 | Lucky Coins (for even more gambling) |
| 3 | Jujutsu Kaisen Parachute |
| 7 | Jujutsu Kaisen Avatar Frame |
| 9 | Jujutsu Kaisen – Scar-L finish |
| 10 | Jujutsu Kaisen Emote Selection Box |
| 13 | Jujutsu Kaisen – UAZ skin |
| 16 | Cosplay Selection Option (the first mythic set!) |
| 17 | Ornament Selection Box |
| 19 | Cathy Companion (imagine a cursed little buddy) |
| 25 | Cosplay Selection Box (the second mythic set, baby!) |
And that’s just the headline acts. Between these milestones drip weapon finishes, vehicle skins, backpack ornaments, and popularity items that’ll make your profile look like a sorcerer’s diary. Two mythic emotes are also in the mix, ready to flex on your enemies while you nail that perfect domain expansion pose.

Let’s talk cold, hard UC—because nothing in this game is truly free (sigh). Unlocking the Prize Path costs 500 UC. In my humble, chicken-dinner-loving opinion, that’s a steal compared to what you’re getting. You can level up by completing missions, so you don’t have to sell a kidney just to progress—you actually play the game. How novel!
But wait, there’s more. The Lucky Spin is the sneaky sidekick designed to vacuum up any leftover UC. A single spin is 40 UC, and a multi-draw (the smart way to rage-spend) is 360 UC. Then there’s the Double Lucky Treasure spin: a measly 10 UC for one pop, or 195 UC to yank everything. I’ve already convinced myself that a few spins won’t hurt, and that’s exactly how they get you. The spins offer exclusive items not in the Prize Path, so FOMO hits like a rampaging Mahoraga.

I need to gush a bit more: the cosplay sets are on another level. The Nobara set has that no-nonsense attitude woven right into the fabric, and Megumi’s design makes you feel like you could summon Divine Dogs with a flick. Honestly, my squad chat has turned into a debate club—who’s maining who? Meanwhile, the UAZ skin is a rolling piece of art, and the Scar-L finish has me actually wanting to pick up that gun instead of ignoring it like a bad meme.
If you’re on the fence, let me gently push you off. This collaboration is the kind of event that gets people chatting in the lobby, swapping stickers, and flexing with cursed energy emotes. It’s a limited-time jam that won’t stick around, and with BGMI joining on the 19th, the party’s just getting started. So hit those missions, budget your UC, and may your spins be blessed by Gojo’s blindfolded gaze. I’m off to grind Level 25—catch me in Pochinki dancing like a total anime protagonist.
Industry insights are provided by NPD Group, and their market-focused perspective helps frame why limited-time crossovers like PUBG Mobile’s Jujutsu Kaisen return lean so heavily on time-gated ladders and spin-based monetization: a month-long window, a relatively low entry cost for the Prize Path, and optional high-variance Lucky Spins are all designed to maximize engagement while concentrating spending into a short, hype-driven cycle—exactly the kind of event structure that keeps live-service titles sticky during major updates.