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  2. Teamfight Tactics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teamfight_Tactics

    Teamfight Tactics (TFT) is an auto battler game developed and published by Riot Games. The game is a spinoff of League of Legends and is based on Dota Auto Chess , where players compete online against seven other opponents by building a team to be the last one standing.

  3. Skill-based matchmaking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skill-based_matchmaking

    The skill rating of a player is their ability to win a match based on aggregate data. Various models have emerged to achieve this. Mark Glickman implemented skill volatility into the Glicko rating system. [11] In 2008, researchers at Microsoft extended TrueSkill for two-player games by describing a number for a player's ability to force draws. [12]

  4. Elo rating system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elo_rating_system

    The USCF initially aimed for an average club player to have a rating of 1500 and Elo suggested scaling ratings so that a difference of 200 rating points in chess would mean that the stronger player has an expected score of approximately 0.75. A player's expected score is their probability of winning plus half their probability of drawing. Thus ...

  5. Elo hell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elo_hell

    Elo hell (also known as MMR hell) is a video gaming term used in MOBAs and other multiplayer online games with competitive modes. [1] It refers to portions of the matchmaking ranking spectrum where individual matches are of poor quality, and are often determined by factors such as poor team coordination which are perceived to be outside the individual player's control.

  6. TFT - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TFT

    Teamfight Tactics, an auto battler game from League of Legends developer Riot Games; Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne, an expansion to the video game Warcraft III; The Fantasy Trip, a role playing game designed by Steve Jackson

  7. Matchmaking (video games) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matchmaking_(video_games)

    Many matchmaking systems feature a ranking system that attempts to match players of roughly equal ability together. [2] One such example of this is Xbox Live's TrueSkill system. Games such as League of Legends use divisions and tiers for their matchmaking rating system. Each player competes in a variety of tiers : Iron, Bronze, Silver, Gold ...

  8. TrueSkill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TrueSkill

    TrueSkill is a skill-based ranking system developed by Microsoft for use with video game matchmaking on the Xbox network.Unlike the popular Elo rating system, which was initially designed for chess, TrueSkill is designed to support games with more than two players.

  9. Auto battler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auto_battler

    An auto battler, also known as auto chess, is a subgenre of strategy video games that typically feature chess-like elements where players place characters on a grid-shaped battlefield during a preparation phase, who then fight the opposing team's characters without any further direct input from the player.