What it is
MarvelRivals.gg is a third-party site, not affiliated with NetEase or Marvel, aiming to be a single destination for the game. Its most-cited piece is its tier lists, which it offers segmented by role (Vanguard, Duelist, Strategist) and by rank bracket, with casual and competitive variants.
Around those tier lists, the site adds a hero wiki/database, build suggestions, and a game news section. The idea is that you don't have to hop between a stats site, a wiki, and a news feed separately.
What problem it solves
Marvel Rivals has around 50 heroes across three roles, and what's strong at a low rank isn't necessarily strong at a high one. A single global tier list hides that difference. MarvelRivals.gg tackles it by segmenting tiers by role and rank bracket, so a mid-rank player doesn't read the same list as a leaderboard top.
On top of that, by bundling tier list, wiki, and news in one place, it reduces the friction of keeping several tabs open to understand the game's current state.
How it's different
Its most direct competitor is RivalsMeta, which is also a meta and tier-list hub.
The difference is the packaging. RivalsMeta is more of a pure data aggregator: it lives on win rates, pick rates, leaderboards, and statistical breakdowns. MarvelRivals.gg packages tier list, wiki/database, and news into a single destination, and emphasizes slicing tiers by rank bracket and by mode (casual vs competitive). If you value having a wiki and news next to the tier list, MarvelRivals.gg is more convenient; if you only want the raw statistical data, RivalsMeta is more direct.
What people use it for
- Reading tier lists by rank: see what's strong in your specific bracket instead of a global average.
- Separating casual from competitive: check the tier that applies to the mode you actually play.
- Consulting a hero's wiki: review kit, abilities, and data in the integrated database.
- Following game news: stay on top of patches, seasons, and changes without leaving the site.
- Looking up builds: get a starting point for per-hero setup.
Who this tool isn't for
If all you want is raw win-rate and pick-rate numbers in the most detail possible, a pure data aggregator will serve you better than a site that splits its attention across tier list, wiki, and news. It's also not for someone just starting who doesn't yet understand the basic kits: a tier list, however well segmented, doesn't teach you to play. And if you already have a wiki and a news feed you prefer, the all-in-one pitch adds less.
How to use it in practice
- Go to marvelrivals.gg in your browser.
- Open the tier list and pick the rank bracket and mode (casual or competitive) that fits you.
- Filter by role to focus on the heroes you actually play.
- If you need detail on a hero, jump to its entry in the wiki/database.
- Stop by the news section to confirm whether a recent patch may have invalidated the tier list you're looking at.
Honest limitations
- It's unofficial: the information is independent, not validated by NetEase or Marvel.
- Aggregate data that lags balance: like any match-based tier list, it takes time to reflect the meta of a freshly released patch.
- Breadth over statistical depth: by covering tier list, wiki, and news, it doesn't go as deep on raw data as a dedicated aggregator.
- A community wiki can have gaps: the database may lag the newest content or have incomplete entries.
How to get started
Open marvelrivals.gg in your browser, no account or install needed. Start with the tier list, set the rank bracket and mode to your case, and filter by your role. When you need context on a hero, use the integrated wiki, and check the news so you don't trust a tier list made stale by a recent patch.
Alternatives to MarvelRivals.gg
If MarvelRivals.gg isn't the right fit, these Marvel Rivals tools cover similar needs.
