The matchmaking algorithm is the unsung hero that determines exactly who you will face every time you press the ‘Battle’ button.
This article explores how developers design these algorithms to keep queue times short while maintaining a competitive environment.
The Elo System Adapted
The algorithm’s primary goal is to match you against someone with the exact same—or very similar—trophy count.
When you go on a massive winning streak, your trophy count inflates, and the algorithm begins matching you against significantly better players.
- If you are hovering around 50%, you are in the correct arena for your skill level.
- Because there are fewer Grandmasters, the algorithm struggles to find perfect matches.
- Losing streaks are also self-correcting.
Level-Based Matchmaking
The standard Elo system works perfectly for chess because all pieces are equal, but tower rush games feature upgradeable cards.
To combat this, developers have implemented secondary checks that look at the player’s King Tower level.
| Player Perception | The Mathematical Reality |
|---|---|
| Rigged Matchmaking | The algorithm does not force losses; you are simply playing tilted against harder opponents because your MMR is inflated |
| The Deck Counter Code | Developers have confirmed repeatedly that the algorithm does not read the contents of your deck when finding an opponent |
True Fairness
This is why all true esports tournaments and competitive challenges utilize the ‘Tournament Standard’ ruleset.
Trust the math, ignore the conspiracy theories, and focus on improving your own gameplay.