Oscar Robertson’s Invincible card headlines NBA 2K26 MyTEAM June run
Oscar Robertson’s Invincible card is a rare do-everything guard: 99s everywhere, 6-foot-5 size, and enough flexibility to fit almost any MyTEAM lineup.

Oscar Robertson is the kind of MyTEAM release that forces an immediate lineup decision. If your current backcourt needs more size, more playmaking, or a guard who can survive on both ends, the 99 OVR Invincible version looks built to change that fast.
2KDB lists Robertson as a Playoffs card added on June 8, 2026, with the Milwaukee Bucks. The frame alone sells part of the case: 6-foot-5 with a 6-foot-8 wingspan. The rest is the kind of stat line that makes endgame cards expensive and annoying to match up with, because the card is listed at 99 for shooting, playmaking, athleticism, defense, and rebounding. That is not a one-skill specialist. That is a full-time engine.
The bigger roster-value point is how 2KDB describes the build. Robertson is set up for isolation, guard play, post usage, and pick-and-roll ball handling, which gives him a wider lane than the usual scoring guard. If your current endgame option is a smaller burst player, or a taller wing guard who still needs help creating in traffic, Robertson offers a cleaner fit. He can run the offense, punish switches, and hold up when the possession turns ugly. That matters in MyTEAM, where one card often has to cover two or three jobs at once.
The timing also fits the June content lane. NBA 2K26’s MyTEAM pitch says NBA and WNBA players can be collected together in the mode for the first time, and the Season 7 Courtside Report says the season includes G.O.A.T., Invincible, and 100 OVR cards. Robertson lands right in that premium lane, not as a side reward but as one of the cards meant to define the late-cycle meta.

His real-world resume gives the drop extra weight. The Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame says Robertson played 14 NBA seasons, scored 26,710 points, and dished out 9,887 assists. He won Rookie of the Year in 1960 and averaged a triple-double in 1961-62 with 30.8 points, 11.4 assists, and 12.5 rebounds per game. NBA.com credits him with leading the Bucks to the 1971 title, and Milwaukee says it acquired him in a trade on April 21, 1970 before retiring his No. 1 on October 18, 1974.
If you want the blunt answer, Oscar Robertson looks worth chasing now because the card solves lineup problems instead of creating them. If your guard rotation already has size, creation, and defense covered, you can pass. If it does not, this is the June run card that can tilt a MyTEAM lineup immediately.
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