Matchmaking Rating (also known as "MMR") is a number calculated for each player to match them with players of similar skill in PvP. The intent behind MMR is to match players by skill. This is accomplished by comparing an assigned number (MMR) that adjusts based on the relative MMR of the opponents you win or lose to. Matching players by their effectiveness or performance helps make sure that less experienced players aren't always getting stomped by expert players, and that competitors at all levels are earning their victories by battling players of roughly equivalent ability. MMR isn't intended to be a "PvP score"—its primary function is in matchmaking.
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| - Matchmaking Rating (also known as "MMR") is a number calculated for each player to match them with players of similar skill in PvP. The intent behind MMR is to match players by skill. This is accomplished by comparing an assigned number (MMR) that adjusts based on the relative MMR of the opponents you win or lose to. Matching players by their effectiveness or performance helps make sure that less experienced players aren't always getting stomped by expert players, and that competitors at all levels are earning their victories by battling players of roughly equivalent ability. MMR isn't intended to be a "PvP score"—its primary function is in matchmaking.
- Matchmaking Rating (also known as "MMR") is a number calculated for each player to match them with players of similar skill. The intent behind MMR is to match players by skill. This is accomplished by comparing an assigned number (MMR) that adjusts based on the relative MMR of the opponents players win or lose to. Matching players by their effectiveness or performance helps make sure that less experienced players aren't always getting stomped by expert players, and that competitors at all levels are earning their victories by battling players of roughly equivalent ability.
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| - by Ghostcrawler, 31 Oct 2012 16:03 GMT
- by Ghostcrawler, Oct 31, 2012 9:00 AM PDT
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| - Matchmaking Rating (also known as "MMR") is a number calculated for each player to match them with players of similar skill in PvP. The intent behind MMR is to match players by skill. This is accomplished by comparing an assigned number (MMR) that adjusts based on the relative MMR of the opponents you win or lose to. Matching players by their effectiveness or performance helps make sure that less experienced players aren't always getting stomped by expert players, and that competitors at all levels are earning their victories by battling players of roughly equivalent ability. MMR isn't intended to be a "PvP score"—its primary function is in matchmaking.
- Matchmaking Rating (also known as "MMR") is a number calculated for each player to match them with players of similar skill. The intent behind MMR is to match players by skill. This is accomplished by comparing an assigned number (MMR) that adjusts based on the relative MMR of the opponents players win or lose to. Matching players by their effectiveness or performance helps make sure that less experienced players aren't always getting stomped by expert players, and that competitors at all levels are earning their victories by battling players of roughly equivalent ability. Unranked Draft Mode and Hero League use a player’s Quick Match MMR as a guideline for players first entering these queues. Similarly, Team League uses an average of all players’ Hero League MMRs as a guideline to determine how new teams will be matched. After Season One, the system will use Unranked Draft instead of Quick Match MMR as the guideline to determine a player’s initial Hero League matches.
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