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🗺️Lineups & Callouts

Valorantmaps

Interactive Valorant maps with callouts and quick references

FreeBeginner

What it is

Valorantmaps is a minimalist website showing Valorant maps with visually marked callouts. Free, web-only, no login, no heavy ads. Active since 2021. Single-purpose: make it easy to learn each map zone's name.

Covers the full current pool and rotated maps (Bind, Haven, Split, Ascent, Pearl, Lotus, Sunset, Abyss, etc.) with the same structure. Every map page has the high-res image with callout overlay.

What problem it solves

Learning callouts on a new map is fundamental to team coordination — you can't say "they're at mid" if you don't know what's called "mid". Traditional options: play custom and memorize (slow), search Liquipedia (scattered info), YouTube guides (entertaining but not quick reference).

Valorantmaps solves it: one page per map, callouts visible instantly, no friction. For new players or when a rotated map returns after months, it's the right tool.

How it differs

Versus Valoplant, Valorantmaps is static and simple. Valoplant is strategic (drawable, lineups, planning); Valorantmaps is quick reference.

Versus Liquipedia (which has map info), Valorantmaps has better callout visualization. Liquipedia has structural info but maps-with-callouts are less optimized.

Versus YouTube map tutorials, Valorantmaps is for quick lookup — you don't want to watch 10 min of video to verify a specific callout.

What people use it for

Learning callouts for a new map: 5 minutes on Valorantmaps + a couple DM against bots learning zones = baseline.

Refreshing rotated maps: when Bind or Haven return to pool after months, quick callout refresh. More efficient than playing custom.

Verifying specific names: "is that zone called Showers or Mid?" — Valorantmaps answers in 10 seconds.

Onboarding new players: if your friend starts Valorant, you send them here to learn basic maps.

Cross-language reference: if your team mixes languages (common in LATAM/EU), valorantmaps in English is common ground.

Who it's not for

If you already know all maps by heart, you don't need this tool — visiting adds friction without value.

If you want strat planning or lineups, Valoplant or Mobalytics are better. Valorantmaps is callouts only.

If you play casually and never use callouts, it adds nothing. Useful only if you communicate with team or want to improve voice comms.

How to use it in practice

  1. Go to valorantmaps.com. No login.
  2. Pick the map from home (grid with all maps).
  3. Map page has the high-res image with callout overlay.
  4. Hover on callouts for additional detail if applicable.
  5. For custom learning: load the map in custom + have Valorantmaps open on a second screen. Cross-reference while exploring.

Honest limitations

Single-purpose by design. If you expected more features, they're not here and won't be.

Update lag with new maps. When Riot ships a new map, Valorantmaps can take days to add callouts (depends on community standard).

English callouts only. No Spanish equivalents. The Anglo community is the reference, but Hispanic teams generally use the same English names.

No variants (defender vs attacker callouts). A same map can have different names for zones depending on role. Valorantmaps uses the most standard.

Acceptable mobile experience, not excellent. High-res images on small screens require zoom in.

Doesn't include sound coverage. For info on who hears what from where, go to other tools.

How to get started

Go to valorantmaps.com. Pick the map you play most and spend 3 minutes memorizing the main callouts (A/B sites, mid, sub-zones). When you enter a match, try to use at least one new callout each round. In a week of consistent use, base vocabulary of any map sets in.