Not since Kiriko has a new Overwatch heroes single-handedly tanked the queue times in Quick Play. I only managed to get a handful of games in and I'm certain the wait times are only going to get worse as the trial for Juno, the game's latest support hero, continues into the weekend. Not only are people clamoring to play her, she might actually be one of the best-designed heroes since Overwatch 2's release.
Juno is a purple-haired, giggly astronaut who many people are comparing to other healers like Ana, Lucio, and Baptiste. On paper, that's basically true: Her gun can heal and deal damage and she can move around the map pretty quickly with a double jump and a Hyper Ring ability that slingshots her team into battle. But she doesn't feel like any of those heroes at all when you play her.
She's extremely mobile. That's largely due to having a fairly short cooldown on her Glide Boost, a quick burst of horizontal speed that I relied on a lot to escape flanking enemies like Tracers and Echos. It doesn't let you launch into the air—she has the double jump for that—but it does keep her slippery enough to stay alive, which feels in balance with her relatively weak damage output. Juno isn't a killer unless you properly set up a play with her other abilities. Instead, she's much better at maintaining her team's momentum by orbiting around them and picking up the slack when the enemy team has stragglers or when someone on your side needs a quick assist.
Lucio held the throne as the only support in the game who could quickly speed boost allies into and out of dangerous situations. In Overwatch 2, healing alone just doesn't cut it with how lethal DPS heroes are, especially with the anti-healing debuff that their attacks apply. Juno is the first hero since Overwatch 1 who has a new way to quickly move her team around and it's called Hyper Ring. She can essentially toss down a giant space portal that gives everyone on your team nitrous as they race forward into the fray.
The Hyper
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