Replay analysis: learn from your games
Volume alone doesn't raise your rating — otherwise everyone who plays a lot would be at the top. The ones who climb review their mistakes and stop repeating them. The main tool for that is replays: they show the game from the outside, without emotions or excuses. Let's cover where to get replays, how to watch them with purpose, and which sites speed up the analysis. The approach is timeless — it works in any patch and at any rank.
Why watch replays
During a match you see the game from the inside: emotions, fog of war, a rush. A replay strips all that away and shows what actually happened — where you stood wrong, when you missed a rotation, why you fell behind on farm. One honest review of a lost game gives more than ten games played on autopilot. It's the cheapest way to improve, buying nothing but your own attention.
Download the replay by Match ID in the Watch tab, rewatch the key moments through the enemy's eyes, and write down 1–2 concrete takeaways per game — that's enough to grow steadily.
Where to get replays
Replays live right in the Dota 2 client:
- Watch tab → Replays. Here you search by Match ID — enter the match number and download the game with the Download Replay button.
- Storage window. Replays of normal matches stay on Valve's servers for about a week. If a game matters — download it right away, or it'll be too late.
- Local storage. A downloaded replay stays on your disk until you delete it; you can rewatch it as often as you like, until a non-compatible client update.
- A friend's Match ID. You can share the match number — a friend or coach downloads the same replay on their end and reviews the game with you.
How to review
Just rewatching the game isn't enough — the review should answer questions:
- Watch through the enemy's eyes. Switch to your lane opponent or whoever was killing you: what did they do differently — how they stood, when they rotated, what they bought.
- Go by key moments. Don't rewatch everything — focus on deaths, lost fights and sagging timings. Use pause and fast-forward.
- Ask a specific question. "Why did I fall behind on farm by minute 10?", "Why did I jump into that fight without my ultimate?" — a pointed question gives a pointed answer.
- Write down 1–2 takeaways. Put into words what you'll do differently next game and keep it in mind. One fixed pattern is worth more than a long list.
Most often replays expose macro mistakes — farm, timings and the map. The guides on tempo control and timings help lock those in.
Third-party tools
Stats sites speed up the review: they point you to the problem before you even launch the client:
- OpenDota. Enter a Match ID — you'll see gold and XP graphs, timings, items and fight participation; if needed it can reparse the data.
- Dotabuff. Profiles, match history and detailed per-game stats — handy for tracking trends and finding the Match ID you need.
- Stratz. Deep analytics plus the Playback tool — a simplified match view with real-time stats for all heroes.
- Pair it with the client. The logic is simple: find the moment a game broke on the site, then rewatch exactly that in the full replay.
Common mistakes
These mistakes turn a review into wasted time:
- Watching only yourself. That just relives your own decisions and hides what the enemy did better.
- Rewatching everything. An hour of replay with no questions is just a rerun, not analysis.
- Looking for someone to blame. A replay is for finding your own mistakes; a list of others' fails won't raise your rating.
- Failing to download in time. An important game's replay was gone after a week because it wasn't saved in time.
FAQ
Where do I find and download a replay in Dota 2?
Open the Watch tab, go to the Replays section and find the game by its Match ID, then click Download Replay. Once downloaded, the replay is stored locally in your client until you delete it, and you can rewatch it as many times as you like.
How long are replays stored?
Replays of normal (non-pro) matches stay on Valve's servers for about a week — download an important game in time. A downloaded replay stays local and isn't removed by time until a non-compatible client update is released.
From whose perspective should I watch a replay?
It's most useful to watch through the eyes of the enemy who beat you, or your lane opponent. That shows what they did differently: how they positioned, when they rotated, which wards they placed. Watching only yourself means repeating the same decisions.
Which sites help review games?
OpenDota, Dotabuff and Stratz store stats by Match ID: gold and XP graphs, timings, items and fight participation. Stratz has a Playback tool — a simplified match view with stats for all heroes. It's a fast way to find the moment a game broke, then rewatch it in the client.
Review shows the mistakes — a boost speeds up growth
Replays teach you not to repeat your failures, but there isn't always time to review every game. Want to grow faster — a boost takes the grind off your shoulders, while the habit of reviewing games locks the skill in on your own account. Not sure which format fits — message us in chat.