New ‘LoL 2022 Rewind’ website shows players’ summary throughout the year

Tracking personal performance and milestones is critical for certain League of Legends players. YearIn.LoL is a new website that provides players with full personal data for 2022.

A third-party company has established a website that functions as a Rewind for your League of Legends history, offering plenty of metrics to show how good—or bad—you’ve been as a player.

YearIn.LoL: A new League of Legends recap website

YearIn.LoL was created on July 8 and uses Riot Games’ League API to display a number of a player’s metrics in imaginative and unusual ways, ranging from your total time spent dead to a total of how many keys you pressed from the keyboard in 2022.

Reddit user “RickLUL” premiered the website and emphasised its features in a post on the League of Legends Subreddit. Rick claims that they have “downloaded EVERY SINGLE GAME FROM 2022” in order to offer all of the normal data that players expect.

“We downloaded every SINGLE game from 2022, archiving every single one of your hard-earned Disco Nunu deaths and Katarina pentakills. Shockingly, our data set doesn’t include any wards placed by marksmen.”

Image via YearIn.LoL

Rick goes on to discuss the website’s features, such as the many leaderboards based on the collected data and statistics. The website also has a multisearch option and promises aesthetically appealing infographics that summarise personal statistics.

All you have to do is go to the website and type in your in-game name.

Images via YearIn.LoL

The League of Legends community has reacted favourably to the new website. Many delighted players reacted to the announcement, applauding the site’s design.

Fans have been clamouring with Riot to include more data to the official League recap emailed to players at the end of each year, but given YearIn’s wealth of statistics, most people will not want to return.

Image via Riot Games

The site’s team has already stated that the product will be available for 2023 by the end of this year, with plans to divide 2024 into seasons for players who want a more precise collection of data.