What it is
Destiny Tracker is the Destiny 2 piece inside Tracker Network, a group of stats sites covering multiple games (Apex, Valorant, Fortnite). Free, web-only, ad-supported with optional premium tier. Active since D2's 2017 launch.
Covers broadly: global player stats, detailed match history, leaderboards by mode, weapon usage trends, and popularity by season. The Bungie API integration is robust and updates are near real-time.
What problem it solves
Destiny 2 exposes little about historical performance from inside the game. The Career tab shows aggregate stats but doesn't allow filtering by mode, comparing with other players, or seeing what weapons you use most. Destiny Tracker fills that gap: it gives you K/D by mode, win rate by map, recent matches with details, and comparisons with the rest of the community.
It also solves the "what weapons are being used right now" problem: weapon usage pages show picks by mode and patch, useful for understanding the meta without depending on editorial hot takes.
How it differs
Versus Raid Report and Trials Report (specialized), Destiny Tracker is broader and shallower. For "how many clears do I have of this raid at each difficulty", Raid Report is better. For "how flawless am I in Trials with enemy fireteam analysis", Trials Report wins. Destiny Tracker covers the general: how you're doing across everything, without specializing.
Versus Bungie.net's official Career tab, Destiny Tracker wins on filters, leaderboards, and comparisons. The official one wins on long-tail data (everything you've achieved since D1, completionist achievements).
What people use it for
Seeing K/D and stats per mode: Crucible, Trials, Iron Banner, Gambit. Filters by season and date ranges.
Detailed match history: each recent match with kills/deaths/score per player, map, mode, duration. Useful for post-game review in PvP.
Weapon usage trends: which weapons are meta this week, what % usage they have, how it shifted from last patch.
Global leaderboards: top players by kills, win rate, K/D. Inspiration or comparison stick.
Opponent lookup: if a 4.0 K/D opponent shows up in Trials, you can look them up on Destiny Tracker before the next match (though this is increasingly limited by Bungie's privacy protections).
Who it's not for
If you want granular raid stats (sherpas, contest mode, low-mans), Raid Report is the source. Destiny Tracker shows completions but doesn't go deep.
If your interest is improving PvP with fireteam and matchup analysis, Trials Report is more useful. Destiny Tracker is better for overview than coaching.
If you don't have a public Bungie.net profile, individual stats may be limited (Bungie lets players hide their career).
How to use it in practice
- Go to
destinytracker.comand search your Bungie ID or platform gamer tag (Steam / PSN / Xbox). - Your profile page loads with aggregate stats, a mode grid, and recent match history.
- Filter by mode (PvP, PvE, Trials) and date range to refine.
- Click an individual match to see the breakdown: your performance vs each player, kills per weapon, map, duration.
- The "Weapons" tab shows what you're using most and how it compares to leaderboards.
Honest limitations
Data limited to public profiles. Bungie lets players hide their career; when they do, Destiny Tracker shows nothing. Frequent on serious PvP players who don't want stalking.
Pushy premium tier. The site nudges PRO Tier for "advanced filters" and extra stats. The free version is functional for 90% of use but there's UX friction.
Moderate to heavy ads. Without adblock, mobile experience is slow.
Match history limited to last X matches. For deep history (your whole career), it's not the tool — the official Career covers that better.
Doesn't cover raids/dungeons in depth. Raid clears are visible but without the granularity Raid Report offers (sherpa stats, time-to-completion, contest mode).
How to get started
Go to destinytracker.com, search your Bungie ID. If your profile is public, the page loads instantly. Walk through the Overview, Crucible, Weapons tabs. Click a recent match to see the detail. For casual use, you don't need more than that.