People love to clown on Call of Duty campaigns as the "one-and-done" bit you finish on a weekend, then forget. Black Ops 7 doesn't really fit that box, especially once you get into Endgame, and if you've been messing around in a CoD BO7 Bot Lobby to warm up your aim, the jump to Avalon's PvE chaos feels even sharper. It's a 32-player drop into a huge city where you roll with up to three friends, scrape for momentum, and try not to get swallowed by toxic zones that creep and cut off routes when you least expect it.

Avalon Isn't A Set Piece

The thing you notice fast is that the map doesn't play like a scripted co-op level. It breathes. One run you're holding a street corner against a faction patrol that just won't stop coming, and the next run you're darting through alleys because a new objective popped up across town. The shifting goals force real choices, not just "follow the marker." You'll hear squads arguing about whether to rotate early or keep looting one more building. And those toxic leaks? They don't just add drama. They mess with your timing, your exfil path, and how long you can afford to stay greedy.

Progress That Actually Feels Risky

Endgame's progression hits because it isn't only about padding a scoreboard. You bring in a custom loadout you've earned, and every deployment has that little knot in your stomach. Get wiped before you extract and the run's progress is gone. Make it out and you feel it immediately: big XP, Combat Rating climbing, and cosmetic rewards that don't look like filler. Better yet, it feeds the unified system, so your Battle Pass and global weapon levels keep moving while you're surviving in Avalon. It's the kind of loop that makes "one more run" sound reasonable at 1 a.m.

The Gating Mess (And The Fix)

At launch, the studio made a call that didn't land: Endgame was locked behind the 11-mission co-op campaign. If you weren't into the story, it felt like homework before the fun. Plenty of players bounced off right there. The good news is they actually reacted, patched it, and separated Endgame from the story mode. Now you can boot the game up, grab your squad, and go straight into the mode people were talking about in the first place.

Why It Sticks Around

Sure, you can compare it to DMZ-style extraction tension or the cadence of Modern Warfare Zombies, but Endgame's got its own Black Ops vibe. It's more about pressure and decision-making than mindless farming: do you push deeper as enemy density ramps up, or cash out while you've still got your gear and your nerves intact? If you're the type who likes tuning loadouts and chasing unlocks, it also helps when services like RSVSR offer ways to pick up game currency or items so you can focus on builds and runs instead of grinding the same chores, and that's the kind of support that fits neatly into Endgame's "keep progressing" rhythm.