Fight History
Every arena match - win or loss - is saved to your fight history. Scroll through, inspect past opponents, review how fights went. The history is how the arena maintains a sense of continuity across matches.

What's Recorded
Each arena fight entry shows:
- Opponent's profile picture (falling back to their class portrait if they haven't uploaded one).
- Opponent's name.
- Fight date.
- Number of turns the fight lasted.
- Win or loss badge.
The list is sorted most-recent-first. If you have no fight history yet, the history section is simply hidden on the arena page.
Turn Count - What It Means
The turn count reflects actual combat exchanges - specifically, the number of damage-dealing events in the battle. A one-turn fight is a crit-on-turn-one kill-shot. A ten-turn fight is a drawn-out grind. It's a quick way to see at a glance whether a match was tight or decisive.
Missed attacks, dodges, and parries don't count as turns here (they're not damage-dealing). Only hits that actually landed.
Inspecting a Past Opponent
Tapping any fight entry navigates to the opponent's profile page, where you can see their full public information:
- Equipment loadout.
- Avatar class.
- Stats.
- Leaderboard rank.
This is the same profile page reachable from the leaderboard itself. The arena just surfaces it through a different entry point.
Learning from losses
If you lost a fight and want to know why, inspect the opponent's profile. Were they using a counter class? Did they have dramatically better equipment? Were their stats pushed into zones yours weren't? The loss might be a signal to invest differently - or to accept that matchups sometimes break unfavorably.
Why History Matters for Achievements
Some arena achievements are data-driven - they fire whenever your fight list changes, evaluating the full list for cumulative conditions. Notable ones:
- Arena Champion (tiered) - win a cumulative number of arena fights, with tiers at progressively higher totals.
Because these achievements look at the whole list, fights recorded on other devices sync in and contribute too. A win on your phone and a loss on your tablet both appear here.
Fallback for Missing Opponents
If an opponent can no longer be fetched - they deleted their account, the network failed, or for any other reason - their entry falls back to "Unknown" as the name. The rest of the row still renders normally, and the fight record stays intact. Tapping the row still tries to open their profile, but it may show a missing-opponent state.
How Long History Is Kept
Arena fight records are ephemeral - they're kept for roughly a week and then hard-deleted, both on your client and on the backend. The arena is meant to show a rolling recent history, not a permanent log of every fight you've ever had.
If you want a long-term competitive record, your cumulative stats show up on the leaderboard through your XP level, which is cumulative and permanent.
Why history isn't permanent
Keeping every match forever would balloon the database over time, especially for heavy arena users. The rolling window keeps the list manageable, focuses the signal on recent engagement, and matches how most players actually use the history (checking who they just fought, not browsing months of matches).
Sync Across Devices
Because fight records sync across your devices, the history stays consistent no matter where you play. A fight on your phone shows up in the history on your tablet (and vice versa) as soon as the sync catches up. See How Syncing Works.
