What it is
The100.io is an LFG (Looking for Group) platform for Destiny 2 focused on scheduling: instead of instant queue, players post activities with specific day/time, and others apply to reserve a slot. Free with optional premium tier. Web + mobile apps (iOS, Android). Active since 2014, originally for D1 only.
Covers all cooperative activities requiring more than 3 players (6-man raids, 3-man dungeons but with serious fireteam search, GMs, etc.). It also has the concept of "groups" — persistent communities that meet regularly with known members.
What problem it solves
Instant LFG (in-game Fireteam Finder, Companion app, r/destiny2lfg) has a problem: it depends on all 6 players being available now. For adults with life outside the game, now rarely works — you need to coordinate ahead.
The100.io solves this with scheduling: post "Vow of the Disciple raid, Thursday 8pm ET, looking for 5", applicants know exactly when and commit. When the time comes, the fireteam is already assembled and everyone knows who they're playing with.
How it differs
Versus the official in-game Fireteam Finder (launched 2024 with The Final Shape), The100.io wins on scheduling and community experience. Fireteam Finder is instant queue similar to other LFG; The100 offers persistent groups, scheduling with specific hours, and experience filters.
Versus r/destiny2lfg, The100 wins on structure: replies are formal applications with your Bungie ID and visible experience, not free-form comments.
Versus Discord LFG channels, The100 wins on persistence and discoverability — you don't need to join 5 different servers to find runs.
What people use it for
Booking raid runs ahead of time: posting or applying to runs starting hours or days in the future. Useful for planned weekend raids.
Finding persistent groups: joining 50-200 player communities with regular cadence (weekly, monthly). You repeat with the same people, form connections.
Day-1 raid or contest mode scheduling: for big events (raid release day), The100 is where things get planned days ahead.
Explicit carries and sherpa runs: fireteam leads who offer carry or sherpa post it explicitly, applicants know what to expect.
Cross-platform LFG: Destiny 2 is crossplay; The100 lets you filter or not by platform per preference.
Who it's not for
If you play Destiny 2 instant (now-I-want-to-play-X), the official Fireteam Finder is faster. The100 pays off when you can wait 30 minutes to 24 hours.
If you play solo or with a fixed friend group, you don't need an LFG platform — you use Discord directly.
If your interest is PvP (Crucible, Trials), The100 covers those modes less. Trials Report and PvP-specific spaces are a better teammate source.
How to use it in practice
- Sign up at
the100.iowith Bungie ID or email. Free tier is functional. - Browse groups by language, region, experience level. Join one or several.
- For specific LFG: post a game with activity (raid, dungeon, GM, etc.), day/time, and description.
- Applicants send requests with their Bungie ID; you accept or decline based on experience (cross-check with Raid Report).
- When the time comes, all confirmed players connect on group Discord or in-game directly.
Honest limitations
Higher learning curve than instant LFG. Setting up a profile, writing posts, and filtering applicants takes time the official Fireteam Finder doesn't require.
Pushy premium tier. Free is functional but the site pushes PRO Tier for "more joinable groups", "advanced filters". Some features are behind paywall.
Mostly English-speaking community. Spanish-language groups exist but are minority. If you only speak Spanish, coverage expectations drop.
Last-minute cancellations. Scheduling doesn't guarantee people show up; flake-outs are common. The100 has a reputation system but it's not perfect.
Primarily cooperative PvE. PvP coverage exists but is lesser — for Trials, other channels are better.
How to get started
Sign up with your Bungie ID. Join a couple of groups in your region/language with good activity (>500 members). For your first raid, apply to a scheduled one rather than posting yourself — seeing the flow from the applicant side is the best intro. After a couple of runs, posting your own games becomes natural.
