April 2026 Update: Objective Stats, Team Compositions, and Better Player Analytics
This is the biggest VictoryView update since launch. Six changes, all aimed at the same thing: giving coaches and analysts more of the data they actually use in prep, and less time spent piecing it together from other sources.
Here's what's new.
Objective stats are now tracked
Kills and deaths tell you who fought. Objectives tell you who won, and why.
VictoryView now tracks objective stats across your team's matches. Dragons, Barons, Rift Heralds, towers. You can see at a glance whether your team is converting leads into map control, or winning fights and then walking away from the objective.
This matters because objective control is one of the hardest things to evaluate from raw KDA data. A team can have five players with strong individual stats and still lose most of their games because they never secure Baron after a won teamfight. Now you can see that pattern in the numbers instead of having to watch every VOD to find it.
How to use it: Check the objectives tab after your next import. Compare objective rates across time windows to see if your team is improving at closing out games or if there's a consistent gap between winning fights and winning objectives.
Team composition builder
Draft prep just got a lot easier.
You can now create, save, and organize team compositions directly inside VictoryView. Pick five champions, assign them to roles, and save the comp with a name. Build out your draft playbook before scrims, reference it during pick/ban, and keep a running library of what your team practices.
No more screenshots of draft boards in a Discord channel that nobody can find two weeks later. No more Google Docs with champion names in plain text. Your compositions live alongside your match data, in the same tool your coaching staff already uses every day.
How to use it: Head to the Compositions section in your team dashboard. Create comps based on what you're planning to practice this week. After scrims, compare how the team performed on each composition using the match data you already have.
Kill participation added to the overview table
Kill participation was always one of the most requested metrics, and it's now part of the player stats table on the team overview page.
For anyone unfamiliar: kill participation (KP%) measures the percentage of your team's kills that a player was involved in, either as a killer or an assist. It's one of the best indicators of how much a player is contributing to team plays versus farming on a side lane during fights.
A high KP% doesn't automatically mean a player is performing well. A support with 80% KP is expected. A top laner with 80% KP might be grouping too much and missing side lane farm. But having the number visible alongside CS/min, KDA, and damage/min lets you cross-reference quickly and spot these patterns.
How to use it: Look at kill participation alongside other stats in the overview. If a player has high KP but low damage, they're showing up to fights but not contributing enough in them. If they have low KP but high CS/min, they're farming well but might be absent from key moments.
Top 3 champions per player on the team overview
When you open the team overview, you can now see each player's three most-played champions at a glance. No need to click into individual profiles just to answer the question "what has this player been playing?"
This is particularly useful for coaches who track champion pools across their roster. If your mid laner's top 3 shifts from control mages to assassins over a two-week period, that's worth a conversation. If your ADC has been one-tricking the same champion for 30 games, you can see it immediately.
How to use it: Check the overview after each weekly import. Look for champion pool changes and discuss them in your next review. If a player is expanding their pool, make sure it's intentional and supported by their stats on those picks.
"Remember me" on login
Small change, big quality-of-life improvement. The login page now has a "Remember me" checkbox so you don't have to re-enter credentials every time you open the app. Check it once and stay logged in.
Visual and usability improvements
We've made a number of smaller fixes across the app:
- Cleaner layout and spacing on several pages
- Improved readability on stat tables
- Various bug fixes that were reported by users over the past weeks
None of these are individually exciting, but together they make the daily experience of using VictoryView smoother. We read every bug report and piece of feedback, and this batch of fixes reflects that.
What this means for your coaching workflow
If you're already running weekly performance reviews (and if you're not, here's how to start), this update adds real depth to your data pull.
Before, you could see how players performed individually. Now you can see how the team controls objectives, what compositions you're practicing, and which champions each player is leaning on. That's a much more complete picture for a 15-minute data review.
Import your latest matches, explore the new stats, and build your first saved composition. The data is already there. Now you have better tools to act on it.