Language: Language

Associations, rosters & volunteer staff

League tooling that fits how community orgs actually run

If your structure lives on Discord, tournaments, scrims, and member support — not a VC-backed esports brand — LoL Tracker is still a serious option for the League side: one shared space for your roster’s games, transparent stats for coaches and admins, and imports for customs the public API will never show.

Visual placeholder — LAN photo, roster banner, or scrim block

Met us in an LFP or recruiting thread? This is a calm intro for boards, captains, and volunteers — not a sales page.

What is LoL Tracker?

A web app where you create a team, link your players’ Riot IDs, and keep a living dashboard: games, trends, MVP-style ratings, and history anyone on staff can open. It complements what you already do on Discord or your site — a single trustworthy link when you debrief or onboard someone new.

Where it helps your League roster

Import scrims & customs without losing data

Custom games are missing from Riot’s public match API. A small desktop helper reads what is already in your League client; you pick the games that count, and they land in your team timeline with the same stats layer as everything else — so reviews start from facts, not three different screenshots.

AI Coach grounded in your matches

The coach reads what you track: prep angles tied to your comps, your history, and how your five-stack plays — useful between scrim nights instead of random solo-queue tips.

One link for volunteers, coaches, and players

Treasurers, game captains, and members can share one URL: who played, how it evolved, what to improve next. Less “who has the sheet?” and more time for events, coaching, and community.

Visual placeholder — Discord moment, emotes, or post-game hype

Flex queue & global leaderboard — optional cherry on top

When your stack also queues Flex 5 together, LoL Tracker can track those games automatically and you can appear on the worldwide Flex team leaderboard. Many community rosters focus on scrims and events first — that is fine. Treat Flex and the leaderboard as a bonus when it matches your rhythm, not a prerequisite.

Student unions, non-profit gaming associations, and multi-game orgs with a League line all start from the same workflow: document what you practice, add Flex when it makes sense. Pricing.