Killing Floor stats & rankings (how it works) What our Killing Floor stats track, how rankings work, and why your profile might be missing.
#1
Posted:
Killing Floor stats & rankings
Stats pages are fun when they reflect real gameplay — not just “who farmed the most”. Our servers use an internal points system that rewards actions that help the team, so different roles can shine (including Medics who heal more than they shoot).
Where to see stats
The live stats page is here:
What rankings are based on
In short:
- you earn points for team-beneficial actions,
- difficulty affects point multipliers,
- and consistent play matters more than “one lucky match”.
If you want the full server knowledge base, start here:
Why the points system matters
Many stats systems are “kill count only”. Our servers are built around team play, so the scoring tries to recognize different roles:
- Medics who heal and keep the team alive
- Sharpshooters who delete priority targets
- Supports who control space and sustain damage
That is also why you might see strong players with different playstyles near the top.
What stats typically track (high level)
Most players look at:
- points/rank position
- playtime/activity (consistency)
- broad performance signals (kills/assists style metrics depending on the page)
Treat rankings as a fun meta layer, not as the whole game. KF is co-op first.
”I can’t find my profile” — common reasons
If you can’t find your profile in the rankings, these are the usual causes:
- You haven’t played on servers in over 3 months.
- Your average perk level is below 25 (Prestige levels are excluded).
- You are banned.
- Your nickname violates server Rules.
Some restrictions are waived for players with Premium (see details):
If your nickname changed (why it can look weird)
Stats are tied to your profile, but display names can change. If you rename often, your entry may look inconsistent for a while. The simplest fix is: play a bit on the network so your profile is refreshed.
Tips if you want to climb rankings (without turning it into grind)
- Play consistently (a few sessions a week beats one 10-hour weekend).
- Pick a role and do it well; the system rewards team-beneficial actions.
- Use modes you can reliably win in; losses and chaos sessions are still fun, but less stable for points.
Anti-farming mindset (what top players actually do)
If you want stable points:
- do not chase only kills; chase “team value”
- avoid risky solo play that wipes the team
- learn one or two modes deeply instead of jumping randomly every round
Want more players online?
Voting helps the most: