Comparison

Trials ReportvsDestiny Tracker

Two Destiny 2 stats sites: Trials Report specializes in Trials of Osiris with matchup analysis, Destiny Tracker covers your stats across every mode with match history and leaderboards.

Category: Player TrackingLast verified: June 3, 2026

Verdict

Trials Report when you play Trials of Osiris with flawless ambition and want real-time matchup analysis of the enemy fireteam. Destiny Tracker when you want a broad overview of your stats across every mode (Crucible, Gambit, PvE) with match history and leaderboards. The former goes deep on one mode; the latter goes wide across the whole game.

Side-by-side

Trials ReportDestiny Tracker
FreeYesYes
Open sourceNoNo
OfficialNoNo
TypeWeb AppWeb App
PlatformsWebWeb
DifficultyIntermediateBeginner
License
Source
VerifiedJune 2, 2026June 2, 2026

Which to use for what

  • Analyze the enemy fireteam before a Trials roundBetter pick: Trials Report

    Its matchup tool loads the rival trio's history as soon as the match starts; Destiny Tracker has no automatic per-fireteam integration.

  • Review your K/D and match history across regular Crucible, Gambit, and Iron BannerBetter pick: Destiny Tracker

    It covers every mode with detailed match history and filters; Trials Report only covers Trials of Osiris.

  • Check the weekend weapon meta in TrialsBetter pick: Trials Report

    It filters weapon usage specifically by the Trials mode; Destiny Tracker shows broader trends by mode and patch.

Both are free, ad-supported web-apps that read your data from the Bungie API. But they target different needs. Trials Report exists for a single weekend mode, Trials of Osiris, and does it with a depth no general tool matches. Destiny Tracker is the Destiny 2 piece inside Tracker Network, and its strength is giving you a broad overview of how you're doing across the whole game: K/D by mode, match history, weapon usage, leaderboards. Many players end up using both, one for the overview and one for the competitive Trials moment.

Coverage: one mode vs the whole game

Trials Report covers Trials of Osiris exclusively. Flawless passages per season, fireteam composition analysis, weapon usage filtered by the Trials mode, fireteam leaderboards, and its distinguishing feature: the matchup tool that loads the enemy trio's recent history as soon as the match starts. If you don't play Trials, the site is irrelevant.

Destiny Tracker goes the opposite way: broad and less deep. It gives you stats by mode (Crucible, Trials, Iron Banner, Gambit), detailed per-match history, weapon usage trends, and global leaderboards. For "how do I stack up against the rest of the community" in any mode, it's the destination.

  • Trials Report: depth in one mode, zero in the rest.
  • Destiny Tracker: breadth across every mode, specializing in none.

Real-time information vs post-match review

The clearest functional difference is the moment of use. Trials Report is meant to be used live: you link your Bungie ID and the site detects your fireteam to automatically show who's across from you, what weapons they run, and how many flawless they have. It's asymmetric information that changes how you play the round.

Destiny Tracker is more about review: you open your profile, walk through the Overview, Crucible, and Weapons tabs, and click a recent match to see the per-player breakdown. It serves post-game analysis, not the moment before combat. It does let you look up an opponent manually, but without Trials Report's automatic per-fireteam integration.

Platform, language, and monetization

Both are web-only, in English, and free with an optional premium tier. Both nudge their PRO Tier —Trials Report for "matchup faster" and extra stats, Destiny Tracker for advanced filters— and both carry ads that weigh more on mobile without an adblocker. Both depend on public profiles: if a player hides their Bungie.net career, neither can show anything, which is common among serious PvP players.

Which one?

  • You play Trials with flawless ambition → Trials Report. The real-time matchup is its whole reason to exist.
  • You want to see your K/D and match history in Crucible, Gambit, or Iron Banner → Destiny Tracker. Trials Report doesn't cover those modes.
  • You need the weekend-specific Trials weapon meta → Trials Report. It filters usage by that mode.
  • You want to compare your general stats against community leaderboards → Destiny Tracker. Broad comparisons are its strength.
  • You want a detailed post-game review of a PvP match → Destiny Tracker. The per-player, per-weapon breakdown is there.
  • You play Trials casually with no flawless ambition → Destiny Tracker is enough; Trials Report's matchup tool delivers little if you're not chasing an edge.

They tend to be complementary: Destiny Tracker for general tracking during the week, Trials Report when the weekend arrives and you queue into Trials chasing the flawless passage. Neither teaches you to play better —creator videos do that— but together they cover the "how am I doing" and the "who am I playing against".

Trials Report

Trials of Osiris stats and matchup analysis for competitive PvP in Destiny 2

View Trials Report
Destiny Tracker

Player stats, leaderboards, and match history for Destiny 2

View Destiny Tracker

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