Comparison

RivalsTrackervsRivalsDB

Two Marvel Rivals web trackers that overlap a lot. RivalsTracker leans toward the player profile and hero analytics; RivalsDB toward leaderboards and per-rank stat tables.

Category: Match TrackingLast verified: June 3, 2026

Verdict

RivalsTracker if you're about the personal profile: your match history, your hero analytics, and where you fall in the rank distribution. RivalsDB if you live in leaderboards and want per-rank hero stat tables. They overlap a lot, so for many it's a preference or second-source choice.

Side-by-side

RivalsTrackerRivalsDB
FreeYesYes
Open sourceNoNo
OfficialNoNo
TypeWeb AppWeb App
PlatformsWebWeb
DifficultyBeginnerBeginner
License
Source
VerifiedJune 3, 2026June 3, 2026

Which to use for what

  • Review your match history and personal progressBetter pick: RivalsTracker

    RivalsTracker is built around the player profile: match history, your own hero analytics, and rank evolution. It's the first thing you see on arrival.

  • Look up per-rank hero stat tablesBetter pick: RivalsDB

    RivalsDB specializes in per-rank stats: each hero's win and pick rate filtered by rank tier, in tables built for comparison.

  • Climb leaderboards and see the top playersBetter pick: RivalsDB

    Leaderboards are the heart of RivalsDB, with detailed rankings of the top players. In RivalsTracker they exist but aren't the main focus.

  • See where you fall in the rank distributionBetter pick: RivalsTracker

    RivalsTracker presents rank distribution clearly and centered on your position, not just as an abstract aggregate figure.

  • Have a second source to cross-check dataBetter pick: RivalsDB

    Since both rely on public data, having RivalsDB alongside RivalsTracker helps cross-check when one page seems to have an odd or stale figure.

RivalsTracker and RivalsDB are two third-party web apps covering almost the same ground: Marvel Rivals stats read from public match data. Open both in separate tabs and you'll see a lot of shared information — win rates, pick rates, profiles, leaderboards. The difference isn't in what they can show but in what they put up front. RivalsTracker greets you with your profile; RivalsDB greets you with the table. Honesty matters here: this is largely a preference choice, and many players end up using them as complementary sources.

Each one's accent

RivalsTracker is built around the player. The first thing you do is search your profile, and there's your match history, your own hero analytics, and your spot in the rank distribution. It's the tool to answer "how am I doing?": which heroes work for you, how your rank evolved, what happened in your recent matches.

RivalsDB is built around the aggregate. Its heart is the leaderboards — detailed rankings of the top players — and the per-rank hero stat tables: each character's win rate and pick rate filtered by rank tier. It's the tool to answer "what works at this rank?" and "who's on top?".

Where they split

The practical distinction is gravity. In RivalsTracker the gravity pulls toward your profile: even with aggregate data present, the natural flow is to review yourself. In RivalsDB the gravity pulls toward tables and rankings: even though you can view profiles, the site shines when you compare heroes by rank or climb the leaderboard.

So for personal hero analytics and rank distribution centered on your position, RivalsTracker feels more direct. And for per-rank hero stats and for living on the leaderboard, RivalsDB has the layout built for it.

The reality of overlap

Let's be clear: these two share more than they differ. Both depend on how NetEase exposes match data, neither is real-time, and both can have lag or gaps after a patch. That means the strongest case for keeping both isn't that one replaces the other, but that they serve as a cross-check. When one page shows a number that feels odd or stale, opening the other helps confirm whether it's a real figure or a scraping glitch.

When each one wins

Use case Winner Why
Your match history and personal progress RivalsTracker Built around the player profile
Per-rank hero stat tables RivalsDB Specialized in data filtered by rank tier
Climbing leaderboards RivalsDB Rankings are its main focus
Seeing where you fall in rank distribution RivalsTracker Presented centered on your position
A second source to cross-check data RivalsDB Useful to contrast when a figure looks off

Verdict

There's no absolute winner here, there's an accent. RivalsTracker if you want a tool centered on you — your history, your heroes, your rank. RivalsDB if you want to live on the leaderboards and compare heroes per rank in tables. Given how much they overlap, the decision is personal preference, and the sensible move for a serious player is to bookmark both: one as a daily base and the other as a second source to cross-check numbers. Neither is official from NetEase, so take both with the same caution as any third-party tracker.

RivalsTracker

Marvel Rivals-only tracker: profiles, hero analytics, and rank distribution

View RivalsTracker
RivalsDB

Tracker focused on leaderboards and per-rank hero statistics

View RivalsDB

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