Field manual
How to use LastRank to scout rivals
Knowing what Power, THP and Kills mean is half the job. The other half is moving through the site fast enough to actually use the answer before a war starts. This guide walks through five concrete situations an alliance leader hits over and over, and the exact LastRank pages each one resolves in. Read it like a playbook — open the site in another tab and follow along.
The whole loop in five minutes
The reason this site exists is one observation: every question an alliance leader asks about a rival is answerable from the public game leaderboards, but the in-game UI only shows the top of one leaderboard at a time. Comparing two players across servers, watching a member's growth over a month, or scouting a Duel League bracket all require switching screens, scrolling, and remembering numbers. LastRank does that in batches. The loop a typical R5 runs — open the rival server, sort by Alliance Power, sort by Alliance Kills, click into the top three rivals to see members, open Stars at 14 days for rising threats and slumping own members — takes about five minutes here versus the better part of an afternoon inside the game. The five sections below cover the five most common loops in detail.
Situation 1 — sizing up an individual rival
You scouted a base in-game and you want to know who you're actually looking at. Search the player name in the top bar (it matches across every monitored server, so transferred accounts still come up under the right one). On the profile, read four numbers in order: Total Power for weight class, Strongest Hero Power for real PvP threat, Army Kills for activity level, and the Stars 14-day delta for recent momentum. Then look at the 26-week history chart — a steady climb is a focused player who'll keep growing; a flat line with one or two spikes is a casual who came in for events. The alliance abbr and rank at the top tell you whether they're R5 leading the charge or R1 sitting on a free spot. Five clicks, and you know if the base in front of you is dangerous or a fat target.
Situation 2 — vetting a recruit
Someone applied to the alliance, or you spotted a candidate on a neighbouring server. Open their profile and start with Stars at 30 days sorted by Power — a candidate growing steadily across the month is a real prospect, while one frozen for weeks is parked. Career level is a rough proxy for how long they've been playing (steady careers above a certain level usually mean veterans), and the THP-vs-Strongest-Hero gap tells you whether their hero investment is focused or scattered. Cross-check alliance rank history in any prior alliance: a candidate who was R4 in their last group brings leadership experience. A candidate who has been R1 in three alliances in two months is signalling something. The whole vetting loop fits in two minutes per applicant, and filtering the global Players grid by country lets you batch-scout an entire region at once.
Situation 3 — planning the next SVS
Server vs Server matches your alliance against another server, so the question to answer is: how do their leading alliance and members compare to yours? Open the rival server page, jump straight to Alliance Kills (not Alliance Power — see the previous guide for why). The top three alliances there are the ones that will actually swing during Kill Day. Click into the top one, drop to Stars 14 days filtered by Kills, and that's the list of members who actually fight — annotate the top five names, they're your real targets. Re-run the same loop on your own server's leading alliance and compare. A gap of more than three or four heavy hitters between the two lists is a warning that the upcoming SVS will be defensive rather than offensive. Plan your alliance Tech donations and rally schedules accordingly.
Situation 4 — spotting a slumping member
Your alliance is at 95 of 100 members and you suspect a few are coasting. The single fastest read is Stars filtered to your own alliance over 7 or 14 days, sorted by absolute growth in either Kills or Power. Anyone whose number didn't move at all (especially across an SVS week) is either taking a break, slumping or quietly preparing to leave. Before you message them, open their profile history — a member who slumped this week but climbed steadily for the previous two months is just having a slow week and probably needs help, not a kick. A member whose history shows a long plateau followed by a recent dip is a different story. The Stars page gives you the candidates in seconds, but the 26-week history is what tells you whether to coach or replace.
Situation 5 — tracking a member who transferred
A core member transferred to another server and you want to know whether they're still playing — or whether they joined a rival. Search their name from the top bar. The profile follows them through migrations, so you'll see them under their new server with the migrated-from #X badge in the header. Open their history to confirm they're still active (a flat line since the transfer means they parked the account). Check the alliance abbr under their new server: if it matches a known rival of yours or shows up among the top of Alliance Kills there, you have actionable information for future SVS draws. The search bar matches partial names, so even nickname tweaks after the move usually still come up.
Shortcuts most users don't know
A few features are worth surfacing because they sit one click deeper than the obvious path. The country filter on the global Players grid lets you scout a single nationality across every server at once — handy for regional alliance recruiting. The percentage sort on Stars (versus absolute growth) catches small accounts climbing fast and is the cleanest way to spot rising talent in the lower power tiers. The Compare with my profile card on any player page overlays your numbers against theirs across every metric. Every filtered view of every grid has a shareable permalink — the URL contains the filter state, so dropping the link in an alliance chat opens the same view for everyone. And the entire site is fully translated between English and Portuguese with a toggle in the footer; player and alliance names stay in their original script regardless.
Live example
Top Army Kills growth over the last 2 weeks
Who climbed the most in this window — not who is biggest today. Live data from the Stars ranking.