An archetype describes how you play — not how good you are. A player of any rank can be a Spearhead or an Anchor. Pick two below to read them side by side; each is scored from your behavior (entry, trading, clutching, survival, support), centered against your rank so raw skill doesn't decide it. ✦ marks a true hybrid, and Flex means no single style stands out.
“First through the door.”
Takes the first duel far more than average — high first-kill AND first-death rate (first in, win or lose).
“Always where they aren't.”
Low first-contact, plays isolated from teammates (few trades either way), frequent clutch situations.
“Calm when it's 1-versus-everyone.”
Frequent clutch situations AND a high clutch win rate (needs both — geometric-mean gated).
“The site does not fall.”
High survival rate, low first-contact, plays near teammates, steady KAST.
“Makes everyone else better.”
High assist ratio, strong trade discipline, high KAST, lower personal combat score.
“Top of the scoreboard.”
High ACS and frequent multikills (the volume pole) with a strong K/D.
“One tap, one kill.”
Headshot % above your rank, a high opening-duel win rate, and a strong K/D — precision that sits alongside volume, not opposite it.
“Same player, every game.”
Low game-to-game ACS variance and consistently high KAST (needs several games).
“A bit of everything.”
No archetype clears the distinctiveness bar — a balanced, all-round profile.
The scoreboard never shows how much you win. Your utility, setups, and timing do the quiet heavy lifting: you trade the instant a teammate drops, flood the team with info, and stack the assists that let your stars pop off. You play for the round over your own stat line — the glue that makes everyone around you better.
You don't live in one lane. Your stat line is balanced across entry, support, fragging and survival — no single behavior stands out, which is exactly what lets you slot into whatever the team needs on the night. It's the profile of an adaptable role-player rather than a specialist (yet).