Civilization Tier List
Live ladder analytics from third-party ranked match data.
Meta Score blends a confidence-adjusted win rate (70%) and pick rate (30%), z-scored across the field; tiers are assigned by percentile, so the bands recalibrate to whatever filter is active. The OP column is that score on a 0–100 scale. Trend (▲/▼) compares the two most recent weeks ladder-wide and is not split by ELO or map. Civs with too few games at the current filter are hidden.
Civ classification — win rate vs pick rate
Each civ is plotted by how often it's picked (x) and how often it wins (y). The dashed lines mark the 50% win line and the average pick rate; faint trails show each civ's movement over the last few weeks. Hover a crest for the exact numbers.
Civ vs civ — matchup win rates (1v1)
Each cell is the row civ's win rate against the column civ. Green = the row civ is favored, red = unfavored; blank cells don't have enough games yet. Hover any cell for the sample size. Sorted by overall win rate.
These views slice the ranked match store by rating bracket: how long games last, which maps dominate, how civ win rates shift, and how swingy the ladder is. All brackets are shown side-by-side — the across-ELO trend is the point — so the ELO filter above doesn't apply here; the ladder (and patch, where relevant) filter does.
Game length by ELO
Median match length and the full distribution per bracket. Games close out faster as rating climbs. Hover a segment for its share.
Map popularity by ELO
Each map's share of games at each bracket. Watch how open maps like Arabia gain share at higher ELO while closed/eco maps fade. Hover a cell for exact figures.
Civ win rate across ELO
Every civ's win rate at each bracket (min 100 games per cell), sorted by overall win rate. Green = favored, red = unfavored. Some civs are far stronger at one end of the ladder than the other.
Rating swings by ELO
Average rating points moved per game, and the typical gain on a win vs. loss on a defeat. Lower brackets swing harder; the top of the ladder settles into tighter exchanges.