New details about the 007 First Light × Coca-Cola promotion have surfaced online. When the campaign was first announced, some fans initially wondered whether it might include additional missions or story content tied to the game. IO Interactive later clarified that the rewards are purely cosmetic DLC, not additional gameplay content.
The Belgian Coca-Cola website previously listed the possible Bond-inspired outfits as rewards, and the French promotion page has now revealed the first images of the skins themselves.
Using these descriptions and images as a starting point, ExpectingMrBond went looking for the closest matching outfits from the Bond films. In some cases, the connection is immediately recognizable. In others, the references are a little less straightforward — and occasionally even raise a few questions.
One thing is already clear, though: after many cosmetics inspired by the Daniel Craig era, it is refreshing to see several skins drawing from earlier chapters of the Bond franchise.
With the images now available, we took a closer look at the five outfits to see which Bond looks may have inspired them — and how closely they match the originals.
One More – Almost a Direct Recreation

We start with the outfit that appears to be almost a direct lift from the films.
The official description on the Belgian Coca-Cola promotion page reads:
“Based on Roger Moore’s green and beige outfit from The Man with the Golden Gun, combining classic elegance with subtle flair.”
Looking at the skin shown on the French promotion site, the connection is immediately recognizable. The combination of a green short-sleeved shirt and light beige trousers clearly references Roger Moore’s outfit in The Man with the Golden Gun.
Bond wears this look during the sequence at a Muay Thai boxing arena in Bangkok, where he intends to meet Andrea Anders, who has secretly agreed to help him obtain the Solex Agitator.
The meeting never happens. When Bond arrives at the arena, Andrea is already seated among the spectators. He sits down beside her, only to realize moments later that she has already been killed by Scaramanga. The assassin soon takes the seat beside him and calmly introduces himself — marking the first direct encounter between the two men.
Visually, the in-game skin stays very close to the film costume, though a few subtle differences can be spotted. In the film, Moore’s shirt features a looser safari-style cut with two chest pockets, typical of 1970s leisurewear, while the version in the game appears more fitted and streamlined.
The trousers differ slightly as well. Moore’s original outfit uses very light beige trousers with a wider 1970s silhouette, while the in-game version opts for a slightly darker tone and a more modern tapered cut.
Despite these adjustments, the resemblance is unmistakable. Among the five skins revealed so far, One More is easily one of the most faithful recreations of a classic Bond outfit.
Leisure Beam – Roger Moore’s Relaxed Bond Style from Live and Let Die

“A relaxed, charismatic style based on Roger Moore’s effortless cool in Live and Let Die.”
The striped shirt and light trousers closely resemble the kind of casual leisurewear worn by Roger Moore’s Bond in Live and Let Die. In the film, Bond wears a light shirt with subtle grey stripes together with light trousers, most notably in the scene following his night with Solitaire.
The in-game skin appears to follow that look quite closely. Bond is shown wearing a striped shirt with rolled sleeves, light trousers, and what appear to be casual loafers, a type of footwear Moore frequently paired with his relaxed resort outfits during the 1970s Bond era.
The skin also shows a visible undershirt beneath the open shirt. While Moore does not wear that exact combination with this striped shirt in Live and Let Die, the film does feature another scene in which Bond appears with an open shirt over a white undershirt, paired with a more casual denim-style outfit during the harbour sequence in San Monique.
Taken together, the in-game version stays very close to the overall relaxed Moore-era beachwear aesthetic, while slightly adjusting a few details of the original look.
Forest Operative – When Brosnan and Craig’s Bond Styles Meet

“A rugged mix inspired by Pierce Brosnan’s tactical look in GoldenEye and Daniel Craig’s green long coat from No Time to Die.”
Among the five skins, Forest Operative is the one that most clearly combines different Bond eras into a single design.
The darker green coat immediately recalls the olive outerwear worn by Daniel Craig’s Bond in No Time to Die during the Norway forest sequence, when Bond returns to Madeleine Swann’s home. The muted green tone and the overall silhouette of the coat closely resemble the in-game design.
The Brosnan reference is less obvious and raises an interesting question: which tactical look from GoldenEye might the description be referring to?
Two possibilities come to mind. The first would be Bond’s black M-65 style field jacket during the opening mission with 006. The second could be the olive-toned shirt and tactical vest Bond wears in Cuba during the film’s finale. However, neither of these outfits closely matches the long coat silhouette seen in the skin.
Looking beyond GoldenEye, the design actually appears closer to another Brosnan-era outfit. The oversized collar and structured sleeves resemble the military-style leather jacket Bond wears in Tomorrow Never Dies during the film’s opening mission at the terrorist arms bazaar. While the material in the game is different, the large collar and rugged construction feel more in line with that design.
First Class – A Curious Case of Mixed Bond References

“Inspired by Roger Moore’s iconic grey suit from Goldfinger, with a modern twist.”
Right away, this description raises a small puzzle. Goldfinger stars Sean Connery, not Roger Moore — and Bond never appears in a grey dinner jacket resembling the one seen in the skin.
So what could the “iconic grey suit” from Goldfinger actually refer to?
There is indeed a famous one: Bond’s grey sharkskin three-piece suit tailored by Anthony Sinclair. Widely considered one of the most recognizable suits of the Connery era, it features a matching waistcoat and classic business-suit tailoring.
That outfit, however, is clearly a day suit, worn during daytime scenes throughout the film. The in-game outfit shown in the promotion images instead resembles evening wear, defined by its shawl lapels and bow tie.
Goldfinger does feature one of Bond’s most iconic dinner jackets — the ivory dinner jacket worn by Sean Connery with a red carnation — but that look follows a very different colour scheme from the grey formalwear suggested by the skin.
Interestingly, that type of look fits much more naturally with the casino setting in Dr. No, where Bond appears in formal attire while gambling and meeting Sylvia Trench. Details such as the pocket square align well with that classic casino style, while the waistcoat seen in the skin appears to be an additional modern flourish.
Observant Spy – A Moore-Inspired Look, but Not a Direct Match

“Refined and perceptive, inspired by Roger Moore’s light-colored long coat from The Man with the Golden Gun.”
Here the connection becomes a little less straightforward.
The skin shows Bond wearing a light-colored double-breasted coat layered over a suit and a roll-neck sweater. The reference to The Man with the Golden Gun is therefore somewhat puzzling. Much of the film takes place in warm locations such as Thailand and Hong Kong, where Bond is typically seen in light suits, shirts, or casual resort wear rather than heavier outerwear.
One of the closest visual parallels in the film may actually be the light-colored suit Bond wears when visiting the bullet craftsman Lazar in Macau, the man responsible for casting Scaramanga’s famous golden bullets. While it is still clearly a suit rather than a coat, its light tone comes closer to the aesthetic of the skin than most of Bond’s other outfits in the film.
While Roger Moore certainly wore double-breasted suits during his Bond era, a coat in this particular style is difficult to match to a specific moment in the films.
The roll-neck sweater also has a few notable parallels in Moore’s screen wardrobe. One iconic example appears in Live and Let Die, where Bond wears a roll-neck with a shoulder holster during the San Monique sequences — a look that players have already been able to unlock as a separate skin in 007 First Light.
Moore also wears a naval uniform combined with a roll-neck sweater for an extended sequence in The Spy Who Loved Me. Interestingly, similar combinations of double-breasted tailoring and roll-neck knitwear could occasionally be seen in Moore’s earlier television work in The Saint as well.
Taken together, the design therefore feels less like a direct recreation from The Man with the Golden Gun and more like a stylized “best of Moore” interpretation, blending several recognizable elements of his screen wardrobe into one modernized look.
Will fans actually be able to get these skins?
The outfits appear to be part of the 007 First Light Coca-Cola promotion, which has already sparked discussion among fans. So far, the campaign has only been announced for Europe, Australia, and New Zealand, meaning many players in other regions may not have access to it.
However, there is good reason to believe that these cosmetics may eventually become available through other means. We already know that 007 First Light will include in-game purchases, making it quite likely that these outfits could later appear in an in-game store or special event after release.
For now, though, they offer a fascinating glimpse at how classic Bond fashion might appear in 007 First Light.
Sources:
Coca-Cola.com – Coca-Cola & 007 Fist Light .Zero cafeïne. Zero zorgen. Epische prijzen.
Coca-Cola.com – Coca-Cola & 007 First Light: Zéro Caféine, Zéro Sucres, tente de gagner des cadeaux






