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About Meta Radar

Last updated March 2026

Meta Radar was built by a small team of Call of Duty players who were tired of outdated tier lists and guesswork loadouts. We wanted one place that told you exactly what's working right now — not last patch, not someone's opinion, but actual data.

We launched in 2025 and have been tracking the Warzone meta ever since, expanding to Black Ops 7 and growing our weapon database week by week.

How the data works

Every weapon ranking on Meta Radar is calculated from aggregated data pulled from across the Call of Duty ecosystem. We combine signals from multiple sources — in-game statistics, community usage data, and performance metrics — and run them through a weighted scoring model that prioritises real-world pick rates over any single source's view.

The result is a consensus ranking that reflects what's actually being played and winning in lobbies right now, updated automatically within 24 hours of any patch or meta shift.

No manual curation. No sponsorships. No bias.

What we track

  • Weapon tier rankings (Meta, Very Good, Good, Average) across Warzone and Black Ops 7
  • Full stat profiles — damage, TTK, ADS time, bullet velocity, magazine size, and more
  • Curated loadout builds per weapon and playstyle variant
  • Meta changes over time so you can see what's rising and falling after each patch

Who uses Meta Radar

From casual players looking for a reliable loadout to competitive players tracking patch-by-patch meta shifts — Meta Radar is built for anyone who wants an edge without spending hours researching. We currently track over 200 weapons across active titles, with new weapons added automatically as they enter the game.

Get in touch

Spotted incorrect data, have a suggestion, or just want to say hi?