Fortnite is experimenting with a structural change to its core battle royale format as part of its upcoming collaboration with South Park. Alongside themed cosmetics and in-game locations, Epic Games is introducing five-player squads, branded as “Quints,” in a limited-time mode tied to the crossover. While the mode is currently scheduled to run only until early February, comments from a senior developer suggest it could return in a more permanent form if player engagement is strong enough.
The South Park collaboration launches on January 9, 2026, and is framed around the show’s core group of characters, with Butters included as the fifth member that justifies the expanded team size. An animated short released alongside the announcement leans into this premise, showing the characters being pulled into Fortnite with a mix of familiar South Park imagery and Fortnite-specific elements. In-game additions include themed items such as the Stick of Truth and Cheesy Poofs, a Cartmanland point of interest, and cosmetics tied to multiple South Park characters.
Quints itself is only briefly highlighted in the promotional material, but its implications are more significant than the crossover content. For the first time in standard battle royale playlists, Fortnite players will be able to queue in teams of five rather than the traditional solo, duo, trio, or four-player squad formats. The mode will be available in its own playlist during the event window.
According to Fortnite design director Ted Timmins, the idea behind Quints was partly thematic but also rooted in how real groups tend to play. Responding to a fan asking whether the mode could become permanent, Timmins said that its future depends on player uptake, adding, “Make it successful then we’ll talk.” That response leaves the door open, but also underlines that Quints is being treated as a test rather than a guaranteed addition.
Adding another team size does increase complexity. Fortnite already divides its player base across multiple squad configurations, Zero Build variants, and a growing list of alternative modes. A five-player option risks fragmenting matchmaking further if demand is uneven. At the same time, it offers a practical solution for larger friend groups who currently have to rotate players or split into separate squads.
The Quints experiment fits into a broader pattern for Fortnite, which has increasingly used high-profile collaborations to trial new mechanics and formats. Whether five-player teams become a lasting feature will likely depend less on the novelty of South Park and more on whether players continue queuing once the crossover content rotates out.
