Raid Report logo

📈Player Tracking

Raid Report

Detailed stats for raid and dungeon completions in Destiny 2

FreeEssentialBeginner

What it is

Raid Report is a website specialized in one thing: showing granular Destiny 2 raid and dungeon stats. Free, ad-supported, no login required. Active since 2017 and continuously maintained — it always supports the latest raid or dungeon from day one.

Covers every raid and dungeon in the game (including ones that no longer rotate), separated by difficulty (normal, master, contest) when applicable. For each activity and player, it calculates total completions, fastest run, sherpas (clears with first-timers), and solo flawless where applicable.

What problem it solves

LFG (Looking for Group) in Destiny 2 lives on trust: you want to know if a player applying has real experience with the raid before inviting them to fireteam. Bungie exposes clears in Career but without the detail of sherpas, contest mode, or fastest time — critical info for deciding whether to trust.

Raid Report answers that in 3 seconds: paste the Bungie ID, see their raid history in clean numbers. If it says 47 clears of Vow of the Disciple, it's real. If it says 0 sherpas, you know they prefer going with experienced groups.

How it differs

Versus Destiny Tracker (which also shows stats), Raid Report is surgically focused: raids and dungeons only. That's why it shows info Destiny Tracker doesn't have: sherpas, contest mode clears, low-man stats, fastest run details. If your question is "how good is this player at raids", Raid Report > Destiny Tracker.

Versus Bungie.net's official Career tab, Raid Report wins on granularity and speed. Career shows the total number; Raid Report shows breakdown by difficulty and context (sherpa, flawless, low-man).

What people use it for

Validating experience for LFG: before inviting a player to your fireteam, paste their ID and check how many clears they have of the raid in question.

Finding sherpas: filter by sherpa count to find players who carry rookies. Useful when you're the rookie and you want someone with proven patience.

Tracking your own progress: how many clears you have of each raid, what your fastest is, who's been your most frequent fireteam mate.

Verifying Day-1 emblems / contest mode: Raid Report distinguishes normal clear from contest mode. To wear the emblem legitimately, you need that distinction.

Stalking your own fireteam: see who you played the last raid with, how long it took, who wiped the most.

Who it's not for

If you don't play raids or dungeons, Raid Report doesn't help. For PvP use Trials Report; for general overview, Destiny Tracker.

If your Bungie profile is private, stats don't show for anyone including yourself (unless you open the profile).

If what you want is raid coaching (mechanics, callouts, encounter strategy), Raid Report teaches nothing — it's pure stats. For guides, YouTube videos are the source.

How to use it in practice

  1. Go to raid.report and search the Bungie ID or platform gamer tag.
  2. The profile page shows a grid of each raid and dungeon with clears, difficulties, fastest time, and sherpas.
  3. Click a specific raid to see per-completion detail: date, fireteam, time, difficulty.
  4. To compare two players, open two tabs and scan side-by-side. No native comparison view but the info is dense.
  5. For LFG: paste the ID in /profile before accepting the player. 30 seconds.

Honest limitations

Raids and dungeons only. For Trials, GMs, other activities — not the source. Each endgame activity has its more specialized tracker.

Depends on public profile. Bungie lets players hide career; if they do, Raid Report shows a "private" message. Not a bug, respect for privacy.

Doesn't measure skill. Only measures completion count. A player with 100 clears isn't necessarily good at mechanics — just persistent. To judge skill, sherpa count and fastest time are more useful signals.

Ads. Without adblock, page can be slow on mobile.

No login or personal features. You can't save a friend list or get notifications. Read-only stalker tool.

How to get started

Go to raid.report, search your Bungie ID. Walk through your own history first — best way to learn what the site shows. Then, before next raid LFG, validate applicants by pasting their IDs. The difference between a fireteam that clears vs wipes is often legible from here.