Players grouped by primary asset family — the replacement for one giant list. A player ranked low overall can be the most valuable piece to the right build. Click any card for the full breakdown and similar players.
The single most useful dynasty map: market value (how the room prices him) against utility (what he did in nine-cat). The list says the high-market player is better. The map says they are different assets — and shows you who to sell and who to buy.
The pool in three dimensions at once. One axis is Production (the raw volume of fantasy stats: per-game counting tonnage and minutes, so whoever plays a lot and fills the box score rates high). One is dynasty market. One is Fantasy (the nine-cat profile as a per-minute rate, with scarce categories weighted heavier, so balanced players and rare-stat combos climb while one-trick specialists and high-volume guys with bad percentages or heavy turnovers drop). The three rarely agree. Drag to rotate. Each of the eight corners is a different kind of asset, and the centre is fairly priced. The names worth acting on are the ones pulled hard toward one corner.
A high-minute compiler with a messy profile sits toward the production side. An efficient player stuck in a small role, or a clean specialist in a scarce category, sits toward the fantasy side. The space between the two is the whole point.
A periodic table of dynasty value: families as groups (columns), lifecycle stage as periods (rows). Like real elements, position implies behaviour — a Prime Window Category Carrier and a Long-Runway Ceiling Option are not points on one scale, they're different families on different shelves. Each tile is a player; hover for the name.
Start from team need, not rank. Each category lists its real carriers by nine-cat z-score. Blocks, steals, assists and threes are the scarce shelves — that's where a "lower-ranked" specialist outvalues a higher-ranked generalist.
Not "who's better?" but "what do I do with him?" Every player sorted into a roster action, derived from his family and the gap between market and utility.
The master board — where rank is just one lens among many. Sort by utility, market, the gap between them, age, or availability. Click a header to sort, a row to open the card.