Fortnite Season 7 'Invasion' Launches With Aliens, UFOs, Superman

The alien invasion isn't just window dressing—it's woven into everything
Describing how Season 7's theme integrates with mechanics rather than existing as mere cosmetic overlay.

Every few months, Fortnite remakes itself — and in doing so, holds up a mirror to the culture it draws from. Season 7, titled Invasion, arrives with aliens, Superman, and a sci-fi overhaul that transforms not just the island's aesthetics but its underlying systems of movement, combat, and progression. It is a reminder that the most enduring games are not static worlds but living ones, perpetually absorbing the myths and icons of the moment.

  • An alien army has descended on Fortnite's island, and the disruption is total — UFOs now streak overhead, commandeerable by any player willing to seize the skies.
  • The chaos isn't just visual: scattered nuts and bolts feed a new weapon upgrade system that makes every loadout decision feel more consequential than before.
  • A wave of cultural icons — Superman, Rick Sanchez, virtual influencer Guggimon — arrives via the Battle Pass, each one a negotiation between brand spectacle and player reward.
  • The Battle Pass itself bends toward player agency, awarding stars that can be spent freely rather than forcing a rigid unlock path.
  • Fortnite Creative receives its own quiet upgrade, with new templates and tools signaling that Epic views player-built worlds as a serious pillar of the game's future.

Fortnite's seventh season, Invasion, arrives with a premise the game has been building toward for years: aliens have landed. The island is now patrolled by an extraterrestrial military force called the Imagined Order, commanded by a figure named Doctor Slone, and the sky is alive with UFOs that players can commandeer for both traversal and tactical disruption — grabbing and relocating objects across the map.

The alien theme isn't cosmetic window dressing. It runs through the season's core systems. UFOs scatter nuts and bolts that feed into a new weapon upgrade mechanic, giving players more granular control over their loadouts. New alien hardware — including a Rail Gun, Flexible Pulse Rifle, Kymera Ray Gun, and Recon Scanner — expands the arsenal with mechanics designed to feel genuinely extraterrestrial rather than reskinned.

The Battle Pass leads with Kymera, a customizable outfit that players shape as they progress. Superman will unlock as the season unfolds, joined by Rick Sanchez from Rick and Morty and virtual influencer Guggimon. The pass awards five Battle Stars per level, spendable on any reward in any order — and even players who skip the purchase can earn free cosmetics through play alone.

Fortnite Creative also sees meaningful updates: a new Hub Island template, a HUD Controller device, and glass prefabs expand the toolkit for player-built experiences. Taken together, Invasion is a season that rewards both the casual visitor and the deeply invested — expansive enough to feel transformative, familiar enough to remain unmistakably Fortnite.

Fortnite's seventh season has arrived with a premise that feels almost inevitable for a game that has spent years pulling characters and concepts from across pop culture: aliens have invaded. The new season, called Invasion, transforms the battle royale into a sci-fi playground where UFOs streak across the sky and an extraterrestrial military force called the Imagined Order—commanded by a figure named Doctor Slone—has established a foothold on the island.

The alien theme runs through nearly every system Epic Games has added this time around. Players can now commandeer UFOs to traverse the map, and these ships do more than just provide transportation. They can grab objects from the environment and deposit them elsewhere on the island, creating new tactical possibilities and environmental chaos. The UFOs also scatter nuts and bolts across the landscape, a resource that feeds into the season's other major addition: upgradable weapons. Rather than simply finding a gun and using it as-is, players can now modify their arsenal, making loadout decisions more granular and rewarding.

The weapon roster itself has expanded with distinctly alien hardware. A Rail Gun, Flexible Pulse Rifle, Kymera Ray Gun, and Recon Scanner join the existing arsenal, each designed to feel at home in this extraterrestrial conflict. These aren't just cosmetic reskins—they represent new mechanics and playstyles for players to experiment with as they navigate the season.

The Battle Pass, which players can purchase or partially unlock through free play, leads with a customizable outfit called Kymera. This character can be personalized as players progress, giving them ownership over their appearance in ways previous seasons have hinted at but not fully delivered. Beyond the outfit, the pass promises a roster of recognizable faces. Superman will arrive as an unlockable character, though not immediately—he'll become available as the season unfolds. Rick Sanchez from Rick and Morty will also join the roster, alongside Guggimon, a virtual influencer. The pass awards five Battle Stars per level, which can be spent on any reward rather than forcing a linear progression, and players who don't purchase the pass can still earn free cosmetics by simply playing and accumulating stars through gameplay.

Beyond the main game, Epic has also updated Fortnite Creative, the mode where players build and design their own experiences. Version 17.00 introduces a new Hub Island template as a starting point for creators, a HUD Controller device for customizing the interface, and glass prefabs that expand the building toolkit. The update also includes visual refinements and fixes to islands and UI elements, suggesting Epic is treating the creative toolset as seriously as the competitive experience.

What emerges from all this is a season designed to feel expansive and transformative. The alien invasion isn't just window dressing—it's woven into the weapons, the traversal, the cosmetics, and the progression systems. For players who have spent years in Fortnite's ever-shifting landscape, Invasion offers enough mechanical novelty to feel fresh while remaining recognizably Fortnite. For newcomers, it's an entry point into a game that has learned to balance blockbuster crossovers with systems that reward both casual play and deep engagement.

The UFOs allow players to pick up things in the environment and can take them to random places on the map if caught
— Season 7 mechanics description
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Inventor

Why does Fortnite keep reaching for these massive intellectual property crossovers? Superman, Rick and Morty—what's the strategy there?

Model

It's partly about cultural momentum. These characters already live in people's heads. When you see Superman in Fortnite, you're not learning who he is—you're experiencing a collision between two things you already care about. That's powerful.

Inventor

But doesn't that risk making the season feel like a checklist rather than a cohesive experience?

Model

It could, but this season seems to understand that. The alien invasion is the connective tissue. Superman isn't just dropped in randomly—he's part of a world that's been invaded. The UFOs, the weapons, the upgradable guns—they all reinforce the same theme.

Inventor

The upgradable weapons are interesting. That's a mechanical change, not just cosmetic. Why now?

Model

It adds a layer of decision-making that wasn't there before. You're not just finding a gun and moving on. You're thinking about what modifications make sense for your playstyle. It makes the loot feel less like luck and more like strategy.

Inventor

And the nuts and bolts scattered by UFOs—that's the currency for upgrades?

Model

Exactly. It ties the alien invasion directly to moment-to-moment gameplay. You're not just fighting aliens for story reasons. You're harvesting their technology to improve your own weapons. It makes the theme functional, not just decorative.

Inventor

What about players who don't buy the Battle Pass? Are they locked out of the experience?

Model

No, and that's deliberate. You can earn free cosmetics just by playing. The paid pass accelerates progress and gives you access to the premium characters, but the core seasonal experience—the UFOs, the weapons, the upgrades—that's available to everyone.

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