MultiVersus characters span one of the strangest crossover rosters in fighting game history, pulling from DC Comics, Looney Tunes, Adventure Time, Game of Thrones, and half a dozen other Warner Bros. properties into a single platform fighter. Since the game's full 2024 relaunch, the roster has continued expanding on a regular schedule, which makes any "complete list" a snapshot rather than a permanent answer.
Here's how the MultiVersus characters roster is actually structured, the core fighters confirmed across the current lineup, and where to check for the latest additions since new characters arrive regularly.
The Class System
Every MultiVersus character belongs to one of several combat classes, and understanding the classes matters more than memorizing individual movesets when you're picking a fighter:
Tanks are built to absorb damage and anchor a team's defense, difficult to knock out and often slower in exchange for durability.
Bruisers favor front-line, close-quarters combat with straightforward, high-damage melee options, generally the most approachable class for newer players.
Mages typically fight at range with projectile-based kits, trading survivability for the ability to control space from a distance.
Assassins specialize in fast, high-damage bursts combined with strong mobility, built to get in, deal damage, and get back out before retaliation lands.
Some MultiVersus characters straddle two classes; Steven Universe, for instance, is officially classified as both Mage and Tank, reflecting a kit that supports both playstyles.

The Confirmed Core Roster
The MultiVersus characters lineup has included, at various points since the game's 2024 relaunch, a roster built around these confirmed fighters: Arya Stark, Batman, Black Adam, Bugs Bunny, Finn, Garnet, Gizmo, Harley Quinn, Iron Giant, Jake, LeBron James, Marvin the Martian, Morty, Reindog, Rick, Shaggy, Steven Universe, Stripe, Superman, Taz, Tom & Jerry, Velma, and Wonder Woman.
Season-specific additions have continued the pattern of adding recognizable pop culture figures rather than sticking exclusively to any one franchise, with characters like the Joker, Banana Guard, and Jason Voorhees confirmed as part of the game's post-relaunch seasonal content.

Why the Roster Keeps Changing
MultiVersus operates as a live-service, free-to-play title, which means the character list is genuinely a moving target rather than a fixed launch roster. Player First Games has consistently added new fighters through seasonal updates since the game's original 2022 beta, and the developers have stated publicly that more characters are planned for the foreseeable future. This is standard practice for platform fighters running on a seasonal content model, similar to how competitive shooters and battle royale titles roll out new content on a regular cadence rather than a single finished package.
If you're checking this list to confirm whether a specific rumored or leaked character (there's an active community tracking datamined roster hints) has actually launched, your safest source is the official MultiVersus website's roster page, which reflects the current, live lineup rather than a guide that may have been written before the latest season's additions.
How to Unlock MultiVersus Characters
Characters in MultiVersus have historically been unlockable through in-game currency (Coins, earned through play) or premium currency (Gleamium, purchased with real money), a structure similar to most free-to-play fighting games and hero shooters. Specific pricing for individual characters has shifted with game updates, so the exact cost of unlocking any given fighter is worth checking in-game rather than relying on older published figures, which can go stale quickly in a live-service economy.

The Takeaway
MultiVersus characters represent one of gaming's most eclectic crossover rosters, spanning DC's biggest names alongside Looney Tunes, Adventure Time, and one very confused Iron Giant, organized around four combat classes that matter more for strategy than any individual character's franchise of origin. The roster has grown steadily since the game's 2024 full relaunch and shows no sign of stopping, which means the best way to stay current isn't a single static article, it's checking the official roster page before you commit Gleamium to a fighter that might be joined by someone even more interesting next season.
Pick a class that matches how you like to fight, then let the roster's chaos be a feature rather than a problem.
AKA VoltHound. Leads Game Pass coverage, hardware reviews, and cross-platform comparisons. Reviews built on mechanics and value over story (the opposite of Micah, which is why they work). Has uninstalled a game mid-cutscene. Twice. Will do it again.Leads Game Pass coverage, hardware reviews, and cross-platform comparisons. Reviews built on mechanics and value over story (the opposite of Micah, which is why they work). Has uninstalled a game mid-cutscene. Twice. Will do it again. Learn More About Nico