guide · dota 2 · map

How to Read the Minimap

The minimap in the corner of your screen is the densest source of information in Dota 2. It shows where enemies are, where allies are heading, where your vision sits and which way the lane is drifting. Let's set the map up for you, train your eyes to keep returning to it, and read its signals before your team does.

Updated May 30, 2026· ~6 min read· Evergreen guide

Short answer

Map awareness is a habit, not a talent. Strong players don't "see the future" — they simply look at the minimap more often and draw conclusions faster from what's on it and what isn't. First set the map up so you can read it instantly, then train your eyes to return to it every few seconds.

In one line

A missing hero is information too. If you can't see three enemies, assume they're coming for you.

Minimap setup

Before you train the habit, set the map up so it reads in a fraction of a second:

  1. Map position. By default the minimap sits in the bottom-left corner. In Settings → Options you can move it to the right — try both and keep the one where your eyes don't jump across the whole screen.
  2. ALT = hero icons. Hold ALT and the colored dots turn into hero icons. Now you see not just "an enemy" but who exactly: a support or a carry, a ganker or a farmer.
  3. Make the icons readable. Enlarge the hero icons and turn on health bars on the map if that helps you read the situation faster.
  4. Colors. Set colors so allies and enemies are instantly distinguishable — in a split second that's the difference between reacting in time and not.

The habit of checking

Setup is useless if your eyes never return to the map. The goal is to look at the minimap every few seconds, not only once the fight has started:

  • Glance at the map between actions. Last-hit a creep, cast an ability, click an item — then a quick look down.
  • Before every decision, look at the map. Going aggressive, pushing, going for a rune, placing a ward — first check where the enemies are.
  • Ask one question. "Where are the ones I can't see?" That alone keeps you from running into the fog of war.
  • Tie it to timings. Before runes spawn and on the approach to Roshan or key objectives, a look at the map is mandatory.
How to check yourself

Think you check the map often? Open a replay and count how many times you actually look down per minute. The number usually surprises people. How to watch replays — in the Match Analysis guide.

What to read on the map

The map is more than enemy dots. Every element means something:

Minimap signals
What you seeWhat it means
Enemies gone from the mapA gank or an objective stack may be coming — lower your risk or group up
Ward dotsWhere you have vision and where the blind spots are — for vision see the Warding guide
The creep line has driftedWhere equilibrium moved and where you can catch or be caught
An ally pings, an icon moves toward youA call for help or a rotation — react right away
Enemy icons have grouped upA push or a fight over an objective is brewing — for example at Roshan

The faster you turn these signals into a decision, the less you depend on reflexes and the more often you're in the right place before your opponent.

When enemies disappear

The most common death in Dota 2 is running into a place where they're waiting for you. Reacting to missing heroes matters more than reacting to visible ones:

  1. Spotted a gap — lower your risk. Three enemies vanished from the map — that's no time to farm their jungle or push a lane alone.
  2. Remember where you last saw them. The last-seen point hints at which way they moved.
  3. Ping the gap for your team. One ping on an empty lane saves a teammate's life more often than you'd think.
  4. Move toward allies or vision. While enemies are in the fog, it's safer to be near your team or under a ward than alone deep in the map.
The rule of three

Can't see three or more enemies? Assume a gank or an objective is being set up. Backing off and being wrong is cheap; running in and being wrong is a free kill for the enemy.

3–5 sinterval to glance at the map
ALTshows hero icons instead of dots
3+missing enemies — a danger signal
1question: "where are the ones I can't see?"

FAQ

Where is the minimap and can I move it?

By default the minimap is in the bottom-left corner. In Settings → Options you can move it to the bottom-right. Put it wherever your eyes don't have to jump across the whole screen — it's personal.

What does holding ALT show on the map?

Holding ALT replaces the colored dots on the minimap with hero icons. So you see not just "an enemy" but who exactly: a support, a carry or a ganker. It helps you judge the threat faster.

How often should I look at the minimap?

Ideally every few seconds — between actions and always before any decision: going aggressive, pushing, going for a rune, taking an objective. It's a habit, not a born talent: you can train it.

What should I do when enemies disappear from the map?

Treat it as a danger signal. Lower your risk, recall where you last saw them, ping the gap for your team and stay near allies or under a ward while enemies are in the fog.

Watching the map but still dying out of nowhere?

Sometimes it's not your reflexes but habits you can't see from the inside. Coaches rated 12,000+ MMR review your game from a replay, show you where you lose the map and give you a 60-minute plan. The lesson recording and homework stay yours; if it doesn't land, we refund you.