You’re about to rethink your ladder plans. The 2025 patch shifts the meta toward control and survivability, with Trunk warping win rates and Alli punishing overextensions. Doug’s utility still matters, but old staples like Chuck and Leon feel lost. Even steady picks like Ollie and Finx can’t shift tournaments alone. With Hypercharge tweaks and gears redefining breakpoints, your best comps—and counters—aren’t what they were last season. So, what actually wins now?
Key Takeaways
- Trunk is the top winner with a 75% adjusted win rate, becoming a draft priority for control-heavy comps.
- Alli rises as a backline assassin; enraged movement and stealth Super enable aggressive picks and escapes.
- Kaze headlines newcomers, bringing high mobility and burst for lane control, reshaping early pressure dynamics.
- Doug remains strong at 64.5% adjusted win rate; Free Toppings amplifies team pressure despite a slight drop.
- Losers include Leon, Frank, and Chuck; their kits lag in a meta favoring control, survivability, and Hypercharge timings.
Meta Shifts at a Glance
Even with Kaze stealing headlines, the meta’s biggest pivots come from Alli and Trunk shaking up team comps—especially Trunk, who’s posting a staggering 75.0% adjusted win rate and warping draft priority. You now draft around Trunk’s pressure and flex Alli to cover maps and modes where sustained utility matters. These meta shifts ripple through bans and lane assignments, forcing you to value control and survivability over burst.
Trophy Road’s rework widens your pool earlier, pushing Rare and Super Rare picks into scrims and ladder, so comps stabilize faster. Hypercharge additions matter too: Lumi spikes on objective maps, while Doug’s mimic creates timing traps and punish windows. Buffs to Chuck, Leon, and Frank open pocket counterpicks, and Bull’s variable Super distance refines engage spacing. Records incentives subtly reward disciplined play.
Big Winners: Brawlers on the Rise
While bans and drafts keep shifting, a few standouts are clearly surging: Trunk headlines the rise with a 75.0% adjusted win rate on a modest 5.82% use rate, forcing you to build comps around his lane pressure and survivability. You’ll also lean on Alli; her enraged movement and stealth Super let you pick fights, reset aggro, and snowball objective control. Doug’s back too—his 64.5% adjusted win rate spikes when Free Toppings lets allies mirror his shots, multiplying zone denial and pick potential.
The Trophy Road rework boosts accessible brawlers, translating to healthier performance across Knight Fight and Dodgebrawl, where mobility and area control dominate. Prioritize these winners and you’ll convert drafts into clean wins.
Brawler | Edge | Best Modes |
---|---|---|
Trunk | Lane bully | Dodgebrawl |
Alli | Assassin picks | Knight Fight |
Doug | Team synergy | Both |
Tough Breaks: Brawlers That Fell Off
Despite a lively patch, several staples slipped, and you’ll feel it in drafts. You’re now weighing familiar brawlers with caution as win rates and usage diverge. Doug’s adjusted win rate fell to 64.5%, and Draco stalled, signaling diminished bite when pressure peaks. Popular picks like Ollie and Finx still post strong win rates (66.5% and 66.2%), yet they’re absent from top-team comps, revealing a meta that punishes shallow synergy.
- Doug’s dip and Draco’s stagnation expose weaker closing power against tighter defenses.
- Ollie and Finx bait you with numbers, but low usage flags matchup issues.
- Chuck’s minor buffs didn’t shift outcomes; he remains a fringe slot.
- Leon and Frank struggle as intensified mechanics outpace their value.
You’ll draft safer brawlers until roles recalibrate.
Newcomers Spotlight: Kaze , Alli, and Trunk
Because the patch reshaped priorities overnight, the real headline is three fresh faces redefining roles: Kaze slices through lanes with blistering mobility and burst to crack formations, Alli’s Mythic Assassin kit chains stealth with an enraged speed Super to hunt backlines, and Trunk’s ant-fueled spin turns a stout Epic Tank into a zone-controlling bruiser. You feel the meta breathe differently the moment kaze hits the map—dash angles punish overextension, and his damage forces mid to respect every flank. Alli punishes blind corners; you’ll rotate faster, bait gadgets, then disappear to finish carries. Trunk anchors objectives; hold choke points, spin through shields, and stack ant boosts for pressure. With June’s newcomers and the Records system, you’ve got fresh goals and explosive playmaking.
Hypercharge and Gear Impact
Even before you lock in a comp, Hypercharges and key Gears now dictate win conditions by spiking power windows and matchup control. You’re planning drafts around spikes: Lumi’s Drum Solo adds side blasts to her Super for tighter crowd control, Doug’s Free Toppings revives and shares his attack for siege-like pressure, Kit’s Making Biscuits extends yarnball, stuns, and heals, and R-T’s 360-Degree Surveillance turns his Super into a zoning hazard. Pair these with damage, reload, or shield Gears and you’ll convert picks into pushes.
Draft around Hypercharge spikes—control, revive pressure, stun-heal chains, and zoning—to convert picks into pushes.
- Farm hypercharge starr drops to unlock pivotal power turns faster.
- Target rewards from masteries that synergize with your most-played brawlers.
- Time Hypercharges to counter enemy gadgets and Supers.
- Swap Gears per map to protect spikes or extend aggression.
Mode-by-Mode Standouts
Hypercharge windows set the pace, but game mode picks still decide your climb. In Trophy Road’s rework, you’ll feel Trunk’s 75% adjusted win rate immediately—he’s the safest push for players grinding the extended ladder. In rotating game modes, Alli’s enraged speed and stealth Super punish overextensions, letting you flip fights and escape with cubes or stars.
In Knight Fight, sustain and burst rule; Doug’s Free Toppings Hypercharge turns ally volleys into lethal mirrors, while Lumi spikes fights during objective races. Dodgebrawl rewards mobility and precision—Mortis dashes through lanes, and Dynamike’s arcs punish chokepoints.
Recent buffs matter: Chuck’s cycle pressure thrives in siege-style objectives, Leon regains pick threat in open maps, and Frank’s sturdier kit anchors control zones. Bull’s variable Super adds clutch pathing in tight maps.
What to Play Now: Best Comps and Counters
While Hypercharge spikes still swing fights, you’ll climb faster by locking in proven trios and packing clear counters. Build around Trunk’s dominance; he’s the brawler anchoring comps with a 75% adjusted win rate. Pair him with Doug for revive safety and a control shooter to peel. If you’d rather play picks, the Dynamike–Mortis–Edgar trio still farms chaotic maps and delivers fast rewards.
- Trunk + Doug + Piper: Trunk fronts, Doug sustains, Piper punishes tanks and checks lanes at range.
- Trunk + Brock + Kaze: Brock chips and opens walls; Kaze flexes engage or disengage.
- Dynamike + Mortis + Edgar: Tempo comp that snowballs picks; rotate quickly and collapse on isolated targets.
- Alli + Doug + Brock: Use Alli’s stealth to force gadgets; Brock and Doug stabilize.
Counter Trunk with Piper/Brock; counter Alli with area control.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Brawl Stars Still Popular in 2025?
Yes, it’s still popular in 2025. You see steady updates, new brawlers like Kaze, Alli, and Trunk, fresh modes, a revamped Trophy Road, and the Records system keeping progression engaging, which keeps you and the community active.
Who Is the No. 1 Brawler?
Trunk’s the no. 1 brawler. You’ll see his 75.0% adjusted win rate and strong community backing put him on top. If you want popularity, you’ll pick Ollie or Finx, but Trunk wins more consistently.
Is There Any LGBTQ in Brawl Stars?
Yes. You’ll find inclusive representation through diverse skins, themes, and character vibes, though no brawler’s explicitly labeled LGBTQ. You’ll see events like Angels & Demons celebrate queer culture, and developers listen, iterate, and expand visibility based on community feedback.
How to Get 🥵 Pin in Brawl Stars?
You get the 🥵 Pin by checking the Shop, opening Brawl Boxes, and completing limited-time events or challenges. Participate in seasonal and community events, hit milestones, and track rotating offers so you don’t miss exclusive reward opportunities.
Conclusion
You’ve got a clear roadmap now. Lean into control and survivability, draft Trunk and Alli when you can, and slot Doug for team sustain and tempo. Avoid overinvesting in Chuck and Leon until they adapt, and treat Ollie and Finx as safe fillers, not win conditions. Adapt your Hypercharge and gear to each mode, prioritize map control, and counter-pick aggressively. If you rotate comps smartly and punish overextensions, you’ll ride this patch’s meta to consistent wins.