Open any Mobile Legends or Wild Rift Discord server during patch week and you’ll see the same chaos. Someone posts a tier list screenshot, three people argue about whether a support hero got nerfed too hard, and somewhere in the thread a pro player’s clip gets dropped as “proof” that the meta has shifted. This happens every few weeks, and it’s not just noise. Hero rankings have quietly become one of the most influential forces in competitive mobile gaming, shaping everything from draft phases at major tournaments to what random players pick in the ranked queue at 2 a.m.
It’s worth asking why a simple ranked list of heroes carries so much weight. Part of the answer is that mobile esports ecosystems are built around constant change, and players who want to stay competitive end up relying on tools and resources beyond just the in-game patch notes. Sites like ManaBuy have grown popular for exactly this reason, offering guides and tracking that help players keep up with a meta that rarely stays still for long.
Why Rankings Move So Fast in Mobile Titles
PC esports titles like League of Legends or Dota 2 get balance patches every couple of weeks, sometimes longer. Mobile games tend to move faster, partly because the games are younger and still finding their footing, and partly because mobile audiences expect frequent content drops to stay engaged. A new hero release, a seasonal rework, or even a small numbers tweak to one ability can ripple through the entire meta within days.
That speed is why tier lists for games like Mobile Legends: Bang Bang get refreshed so often. A hero sitting comfortably in S-tier one month can drop to B-tier the next if their core item gets a cooldown adjustment. Players who don’t track these shifts end up picking heroes that look strong on paper but are actually dead weight in the current patch.
Meta Changes and the Domino Effect on Team Roles
Here’s something casual players often miss: a single hero’s ranking shift rarely stays contained to that one hero. Roles in mobile MOBAs are interconnected. If a jungler suddenly becomes dominant because of a buff, that changes which lane heroes can safely rotate for ganks. If a tank’s sustain gets nerfed, marksmen who relied on that tank to soak damage suddenly find themselves exposed earlier in fights.
I’ve watched this play out in scrims more times than I can count. A team builds a draft strategy around one “broken” pick, the patch hits, that pick gets adjusted, and suddenly half the team comp doesn’t function the way it used to. The teams that adapt fastest aren’t necessarily the ones with the best individual mechanics. They’re the ones who treat hero rankings as a living system rather than a static list to memorize.
Roamers and supports tend to feel meta shifts the hardest, honestly. Their entire job is reacting to what the enemy team does, so when the “correct” answer to a given matchup changes overnight, supports are the ones scrambling to figure out the new correct answer in real time.
Hero Strengths Aren’t Fixed, They’re Contextual
One thing that trips up newer competitive players is treating hero strength as an absolute quality. A hero ranked S-tier in solo queue might be mediocre in a structured 5v5 with coordinated rotations, because solo queue rewards heroes who can carry games independently, while organized play rewards heroes who synergize with a team’s overall plan.
This is part of why a lot of serious players cross-reference multiple sources before forming opinions on the current meta. A detailed MLBB hero ranking guide that breaks down not just “who’s strong” but why a hero is strong, in what context, against what compositions, tends to be far more useful than a flat list. The “why” matters more than the ranking position itself, because that’s the part that transfers when the next patch inevitably shuffles things around again.
Pro teams take this even further. Their analysts aren’t just looking at win rates. They’re looking at pick/ban patterns across regions, how heroes perform in different map states, and which heroes have hidden synergies that haven’t been fully explored by the wider playerbase yet. Sometimes a hero sits in B-tier on public lists simply because most players haven’t figured out the combo that makes them dangerous.
Player Strategy: Reading the Meta vs. Following It
There’s a meaningful difference between players who follow tier lists and players who read them critically. Following a tier list means picking whatever’s at the top and hoping it works. Reading a tier list means understanding the logic behind the placements and figuring out where the gaps are.
The best competitive players I’ve watched tend to do something counterintuitive: they look for heroes that are slightly underrated relative to their actual power level, especially in the early weeks of a patch before everyone catches up. That window, between a balance change going live and the wider community fully adjusting, is where a lot of tournament upsets happen. A team that identifies an undervalued pick before opponents do gets a draft advantage that can last for several games before the rest of the scene catches on.
This is also why hero ranking discussions never really settle. Even when a list feels “correct” for a given patch, someone somewhere is testing an unconventional build or rotation that could flip the conversation entirely.
The Bigger Picture
Hero rankings aren’t just a curiosity for stat-watchers. They function as a feedback loop between developers, pro teams, content creators, and everyday players, each group influencing how the others perceive the game’s current state. A balance patch shifts the rankings, the rankings shift team strategies, team strategies show up in tournament results, and those results often influence the next round of balance decisions.
For anyone trying to climb ranked or just understand why their favorite team drafted the way they did last weekend, paying attention to how and why hero rankings shift is honestly more useful than memorizing any single tier list. The list is a snapshot. The reasoning behind it is what actually carries over from patch to patch.






