Gaming Roundup

Best Meccha Chameleon Workshop Maps Based on Famous Video Games

Five fan-built recreations of Minecraft, Dust2, Fortnite, Rust, and Wind Waker worth subscribing to right now.

Five fan-built recreations of Minecraft, Dust2, Fortnite, Rust, and Wind Waker worth subscribing to right now.

Meccha Chameleon turns hide-and-seek into a painting contest. You take a plain white body, splash it with color, strike a pose, and try to vanish into a wall while seekers hunt you down. The game arrived on Steam on June 10, 2026 for $5.99, and almost immediately its Steam Workshop filled up with custom maps. The most fun of the bunch recreate locations from games you already know, which changes the whole rhythm of a match because you know the layout before the round even starts.

Quick answer: The five best video game-inspired maps to subscribe to are the Minecraft map by Skolas, De_dust2 from Counter-Strike 2, Fortnite’s Dusty Divot, Rust from Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, and Windfall Island from The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker. Open each Workshop page below and hit Subscribe to auto-download it.


How to install a Workshop map

Each map lives on its own Steam Workshop page. Subscribing tells Steam to download the map and keep it updated, then it shows up in your in-game map list. There’s nothing to drag into a folder.

Open the Workshop page for the map you want using the link in each section below.
Click Subscribe. Steam downloads the map in the background and adds it to your library.
Launch Meccha Chameleon, create a non-private server, and pick the map from your list so friends or strangers can join.

You’ll know it worked when the subscribed map appears alongside the default stages like Sewer, Indoor Country, and Backrooms when you set up a lobby.


1. Minecraft map by Skolas

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This is the most-subscribed video game map in the entire Workshop, sitting at more than 91,000 subscribers and 252 ratings. It rebuilds the familiar Minecraft world out of blocky shapes, dirt patches, stone walls, and wooden builds, right down to diamond ore. Anyone who has played Mojang’s sandbox will recognize it instantly.

The blocky look is a gift for the paint mechanic. Matching a flat brown dirt block or a grey stone face is far simpler than blending into a detailed, organic scene, so even newer players can disappear cleanly here.

Grab it from the Minecraft map by Skolas on the Steam Workshop.


2. De_dust2 from Counter-Strike 2 by Tofu

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Dust2 needs no introduction, and the second most popular video game map carries it over with more than 42,000 subscribers. Tofu’s port keeps the layout of the most iconic competitive level in shooter history.

The sandy, sun-bleached palette and scattered crates give hiders plenty of cover and easy surfaces to copy. The catch is that nearly everyone already knows Dust2 by heart, so seekers will sweep the usual angles fast.

Download the De_dust2 map by Tofu to play it.


3. Dusty Divot from Fortnite by pablolm23

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Dusty Divot pulls one of Fortnite’s standout Chapter 1 spots into the mix and crossed 6,200 subscribers within days of release. The location formed when a meteor smashed into Dusty Depot, leaving a crater full of research equipment and glowing meteor rocks for a strange industrial-meets-alien vibe.

The combination of open ground, scattered gear, and the uneven crater floor creates a lot of natural hiding angles, which makes for tense, fast rounds.

Subscribe to the Dusty Divot map on the Steam Workshop.


4. Rust from Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 by Jake

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Rust first showed up in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 back in 2009, and it’s still one of the most recognizable small maps in the series. Jake’s recreation keeps the tiny oil-field setup, complete with the central tower, walkways, pipes, and wooden structures.

Its small footprint keeps things fair for seekers, while the mix of metal, wood, and rusted surfaces gives hiders a useful spread of textures to paint against.

Get the Rust map by Jake from the Workshop.


5. Windfall Island from The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker by Jake

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The most unusual pick on the list, Windfall Island recreates the main hub town from The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker, with tall towers, winding paths, and trees. It’s also the work of Jake.

The bright, stylized buildings flip the usual challenge. Instead of melting into neutral greys and browns, you have to match vivid painted walls and rooftops, which demands sharper painting and rewards players who have a feel for color.

Subscribe to the Windfall Island map by Jake to try it.


Quick comparison of the five maps

MapSource gameCreatorPopularity
MinecraftMinecraftSkolas91,000+ subscribers, 252 ratings
De_dust2Counter-Strike 2Tofu42,000+ subscribers
Dusty DivotFortnitepablolm236,200+ subscribers
RustCall of Duty: Modern Warfare 2JakeFan recreation of the MW2 map
Windfall IslandThe Legend of Zelda: The Wind WakerJakeStylized, color-heavy hub town

If you want the easiest entry point, start with the Minecraft map since its flat blocks forgive sloppy painting. Save Windfall Island for when your color-matching is sharp, and use the smaller layouts like Rust when you want quick, high-pressure rounds. With the Workshop still growing day by day, these five are the recreations carrying the most weight right now.