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CounterWatch

Expand Your Overwatch Hero Pool: Find Your Next Hero· Season 2

Counter-picking calculator for your hero pool · updated daily

Tell us which Overwatch heroes you already play. Counterwatch ranks the heroes you should learn next: picks that step in when your main gets banned, flex spots that cover your worst matchups, and synergies that lift your existing pool. Showing all ranks.

Last updated May 12, 2026 · Sourced from thousands of tracked community matches.

Your hero pool

Heroes whose abilities combo with your pool. These stay valuable across patches and balance updates.

61K matches in this viewVery highconfidence
Example output · add heroes above to personalise
How we rank the next hero to learn

Each candidate is scored on a composite Hero Pool Fit Scoredesigned for players who want to add a hero to an existing pool rather than start fresh. The score combines five signals, each normalised against the site's tier thresholds (0 ≈ F-tier WR, 1 ≈ S-tier WR):

  • Win rate (20%). Bayesian-shrunk standalone win rate. Drives the ban-substitute and off-role flex framing: when one of your pool heroes is removed, you want a hero that wins games on their own merit. Boosted 15% when your pool has only one hero in this role (scarcity).
  • Pair value (20%). Mean pair win rate across your pool, in one of two flavours (switchable above the recommendations):
    • Best to learn subtracts each hero's standalone strength to isolate how their abilities actually combo with yours, independent of whoever's currently overtuned. The signal stays valuable across balance patches.
    • Best to winuses raw pair win rate this season: what's winning games today. Better for climbing right now, sometimes worse when the balance rotates.
  • Counter cover (30%). For each opponent that currently beats your pool, how much does the candidate flip that matchup? Pickrate-weighted so frequent threats matter more than rare ones.
  • Map cover (20%). Candidate's mean win rate on the maps where your pool's pooled win rate is below 50%. Missing maps are renormalised out rather than imputed. Falls back to your pool's weakest quartile when no map is below the threshold.
  • Confidence (10%). Logistic function of total tracked matches. ~0.1 at 1k, ~0.5 at 10k, ~0.95 at 50k. Keeps small-sample heroes from leading a role.

We apply hard floors before scoring: a candidate needs at least 5,000 tracked matches (1,000 for Stadium). Counter and synergy rows below 200 matches are excluded: shrinkage alone doesn't suppress that noise. Heroes already in your pool are excluded from the candidate set, and honourable mentionssurface heroes that don't take the top spot but answer a specific question: who's your best ban substitute, who handles your worst matchups, and who shines on your weakest maps.

When your pool has all of its recommended slots filled in a role, the recommendation flips to a compact "you're covered" card. When your pool overfills a role beyond the recommended cap, we nudge you toward branching into an under-represented role instead. Practice time is finite and a fourth specialist is usually lower-value than a flex pick.

Data is pulled from thousands of tracked community matches and refreshed daily around 07:00 UTC. Last updated: May 12, 2026.

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between a main, secondary, and flex pick?
Your main is the hero you play by default: the one you've practiced most. A secondary is your backup main for the same role: who you switch to when your main gets banned or hard-countered. A flex pick is a hero in a different role you can fill into when the team needs it. This tool ranks the best next hero to learn in each of those categories based on your existing pool.
How many heroes should I have in my pool in Overwatch 6V6 in Season 2?
Most ranked players climb fastest with a 2-3 hero pool in their main role plus one cross-role flex. In Overwatch 6V6 that's typically a primary main, one secondary for ban situations or counters, and a single flex pick in a second role. Going wider than 5-6 heroes hurts you: practice time fragments. This tool caps your pool at 6 because the recommendation signal degrades past that.
How do I pick a secondary hero when my main is banned in Overwatch 6V6?
Look for a same-role hero that wins on the maps your main struggles on, covers the matchups that counter your main, and shares some mechanical patterns so practice transfers. The 'Best ban substitute' honourable mention on this page is calibrated exactly for that: it prioritises same-role coverage of your main's worst matchups and weak maps.
Should my second hero be in the same role as my main in Overwatch 6V6?
If you're below Diamond and play role queue, yes. A same-role secondary triples the value of your existing macro and matchup knowledge. If you're already Diamond+ or play open-queue / Marvel Rivals, branching into a second role is often higher-impact because team-composition flexibility outweighs same-role specialisation at that level. This tool surfaces both options per role section.
What's the difference between 'Best to learn' and 'Best to win' picks?
Best to learn ranks pairings by how well two heroes' abilities combo, after stripping out each hero's standalone strength. A hero that's only strong because they're currently overtuned won't score high here: the pairing has to make mechanical sense, which keeps it valuable across balance patches. Best to win ranks pairings by raw current-season win rate; you get the heroes winning the most paired with your pool today, even if the combo doesn't have an obvious mechanical reason. Most players should pick from Best to learn because heroes take time to master.
How long does it take to learn a second hero in Overwatch 6V6?
Most players reach baseline competence (a 50% win rate) on a new Overwatch 6V6 hero inside 30-50 ranked matches if they actively study the hero. Same-role secondaries transfer faster than cross-role flexes because mechanics, map knowledge, and matchup intuition partly carry over. We surface picks that match your current pool's patterns to shorten this learning curve.
Which heroes pair best with your main in Overwatch 6V6?
Pair quality depends on the specific hero, not just the role. Add your main to the pool above and check the top pick in each role. The pair-value bar shows how strongly the candidate complements your main specifically, switchable between long-term mechanical fit and raw current-season pair win rate.
How is this list generated?
We score every hero against your current pool on a composite Hero Pool Fit Score that blends win rate, pair value (currently in Best to learn mode), counter cover against the heroes that beat your pool, map cover for the maps where your pool struggles, and a sample-size confidence factor. Heroes below 5,000 tracked matches in the current slice are filtered out. See the methodology section above for the full weight breakdown.
How often does the list update?
Every day around 07:00 UTC. The underlying matchup, synergy, and map data comes from thousands of tracked community matches, refreshed daily. Expect the top picks to stay stable across a patch and to shift when balance updates or new heroes drop.

Explore more Overwatch stats

Also play Marvel Rivals? See Marvel Rivals stats →

Want more than stats?

The Counterwatch desktop app gives you everything on this page and more, directly inside your game.

  • Deeper stats - personal win rates, hero grades, and match history beyond what's shown here
  • Live match data - real-time counter suggestions and win chance as heroes are picked
  • Performance tracking - session grades, hero grades, and trends over time compared to your averages
  • In-game overlay - match roster, hero swaps, and counter picks right on your screen