First: make yourself findable
Everything starts with your profile. Add the games you play with your rank and role in each, set your region and platform, write a bio that says what you're looking for, and flip on Looking for Team. That LFT flag is a beacon: recruiting squads filter for it, and it shows on your card in the players directory. A complete profile with clips attached gets messages; an empty one doesn't.
Option 1: browse the players directory
The players directoryis the roster of the whole platform filterable by game, region, platform, and playstyle. Find someone whose games and ranks line up with yours, check their clips and tournament record on their profile, then follow or message them. It's the low-pressure route: scout first, talk second.
Option 2: post on the LFG board
The LFG board is the fast lane, with three kinds of posts:
- Player posts “I need a team”: your game, rank, role, region, and whether you're on mic
- Recruiting posts “our team needs players”: the roles needed and the minimum rank
- Server posts communities recruiting members for their game server
Posts support urgency flags for tonight's-scrim emergencies, and inactive posts expire so the board stays real. Replies happen in comments give people something to reply to beyond your rank.
Option 3: join (or found) a squad
A squadis the long-term version: a persistent team with its own page, handle, roster, and shared history. Squads flag themselves as recruiting when slots open; you apply, the squad's leadership accepts, and from then on you enter team tournaments together and build a shared record. If nothing out there fits, found your own naming it is the hardest part.
Closing the loop
Found your people? Add them as friends, message the group, and get a squad formed before the next tournament's registration closes. Teams that queue together climb the leaderboards together.
Create your profile to get started the directory, the board, and every squad page are open to browse right now.