Leagues, Seasons, and Progression
How competition is structured and how you progress over time.
Fantasy Top's competitive structure is built around leagues and seasons. Leagues offer different levels of competition with varying rarity caps and prize pools. As you build your collection and skills, you can compete in higher leagues for bigger rewards.
League Structure
There are five competitive leagues in Fantasy Top, each with different rarity caps and prize pools:
Bronze League - Entry-level competition featuring Commons only and a 19 star cap.
Silver League - Novice-level competition unlocking the use of Rare and a 23 star cap.
Gold League - Advanced competitive play with Commons, Rares, Epics and a 25 star cap.
Platinum League - Elite-level competition with all rarities and a 27 star cap.
Diamond League - The highest tier. No rarity or star caps. Welcome to the big leagues.

You can enter any league you want, as long as your deck meets that league's rarity cap requirements. There's no promotion or demotion system. If you have the cards to compete in Diamond, you can enter Diamond. If you want to test a budget deck in Bronze, you can do that too.
This gives you complete flexibility. Build multiple decks at different power levels and compete where you see the best opportunity.
How Seasons Work
A season in Fantasy Top lasts 6 weeks and represents a competitive cycle. During a season:
Weekly Core Competition tournaments run continuously
You can compete in any league that matches your deck's rarity level
New Heroes may be introduced to the pool at the beginning of each season
Special events, prize pools, and jackpots are featured
Leaderboards track performance across the season
Seasons give the game a natural rhythm. They're long enough to allow meaningful competition and collection building but short enough to keep things fresh and allow for meta shifts.
Choosing Your League
The league you enter each week depends on your deck composition and strategic goals.
Enter lower leagues when:
You're building your collection and don't have high-rarity cards yet
You want to test new Heroes or strategies with lower stakes
You're confident your budget deck can compete for top spots
Enter higher leagues when:
You've acquired high-rarity cards and want to maximize their multipliers
You're ready to compete for larger prize pools
You have confidence in your lineup and want to face tougher competition
Many players compete in multiple leagues throughout a season, adapting their strategy based on their collection, the current meta, and where they see the best risk-reward ratio.
Next, understand how the economy works: Currencies, or dive into specific game modes in Core Competition.
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