Quick take
- 1Write one fight, not a full match diary.
- 2Include gameplay context: hero, rank, map phase, enemy pressure, and result.
- 3Leave out names, handles, contact details, account IDs, and private messages.
Tool guide
Match Analysis works best when you give it one specific fight pattern. The tool is not a replay parser and it should not receive personal information. Treat it like a short coaching prompt: what happened, what you tried, what went wrong, and what you want to fix next.
Quick take
The strongest notes start with a pattern: died first to dive, used ultimate after the fight was lost, overextended as Vanguard, lost line of sight as Strategist, or chased the wrong target as Duelist.
If you send a broad complaint, the answer has to stay broad. If you send one repeated problem, the coach can return a mistake, a safer plan, and one drill you can remember in the next queue.
Do not include real names, player handles, account credentials, contact details, chat logs, or private messages. The tool only needs gameplay context to produce a useful read.
If a detail does not change the in-game decision, leave it out. Your position, cooldown timing, team shape, and target focus matter. Someone's identity does not.
After the coach returns a response, pick one habit for the next match. Do not try to fix positioning, cooldowns, target focus, and ultimate timing all at once.
Queue with one sentence in mind: hold the survival cooldown, play one corner closer, wait for the Vanguard step, call the diver early, or spend ultimate before two teammates die. Then come back with what changed.
Keep going
Sources and review basis
Pocket Rivals guide pages are independent advice. They are reviewed against official Marvel Rivals source links, recent Daily Digest entries, and the site's Bronze-to-Platinum editorial standards instead of claiming hidden live win-rate data.