Does Fall Guys have skill-based matchmaking?

Just how do all of these players get matched together?

Image via Mediatonic/Epic Games

Fall Guys is one of the easiest competitive games to get addicted to. Its simple mechanics combined with colorful gameplay and complicated obstacle courses make it appealing to both the most casual gamers and the hyper-competitive.

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Earlier this year, Fall Guys welcomed a significant boost to its player base with its move to free-to-play. As a result, it does have many players wondering how, exactly, the game decides what players to put into their games.

As any Fall Guys player can tell you, actually winning a show and the crown that comes along with it can be very difficult, and as you do better and better, it seems that the players you face up against get better alongside you. This has led many to question whether or not Fall Guys implements skill-based matchmaking, or SBMM as it’s commonly known. 

SBMM is incorporated in many PvP games to make sure that players face off against opponents with a somewhat similar level of experience and skill. While this doesn’t mean that you’ll never see players worse or better than you in those games with SBMM, it usually protects beginners from playing against the game’s most experienced players and getting trounced because of it.

So, does Fall Guys actually have SBMM? Or does it just feel that way after losing a few rounds in a row?

How SBMM works in Fall Guys

Fall Guys does use skill-based matchmaking to determine what players the game uses to fill a lobby in its Solo shows. The feature was added in April 2022, shortly after Fall Guys changed its matchmaking service from the Unity Matchmaker to the Fortnite Matchmaker. The change makes sense, given Fortnite’s matchmaking service is hosted by Epic Games, of which Fall Guys developer Mediatronic is now a subsidiary.

Basically, SBMM in Fall Guys seeks to keep things competitive in every game you play. Players’ results are presumably used to calculate some sort of score (commonly referred to in many games as their matchmaking rating, or MMR), and those scores are used to group players with similar scores together. This way, actual kids that may be playing the game and aren’t very good at it might have a chance of doing well every once in a while, while better players get grouped together. If you’ve won a bunch of Solo shows and suddenly notice that your lobbies feel much sweatier and more difficult to progress through, it’s probably because the game saw you winning a bunch and started matching you with other players who also win a bunch.

Obviously, grouping scores together in this way won’t guarantee a perfectly even distribution of skill all the time, but it will keep lobbies relatively competitive. If you see someone in one of your Fall Guys games with cosmetics that indicate they’ve won way more crowns than you, well, that probably means that they haven’t been doing so well recently, or have simply played the game for a much longer period of time than you have and are not necessarily that much better than you.

While many games use SBMM to keep their lobbies competitive, it’s become one of the leading complaints in the Fall Guys community. Many players want the game to remain the more casual experience that it was when it first launched without SBMM. It’s even become a part of the issues that have been lumped together in the #SaveFallGuys movement, which gained popularity online in October 2022.

Author
Image of Adam Snavely
Adam Snavely
Associate Editor and Apex Legends Lead. From getting into fights over Madden and FIFA with his brothers to interviewing some of the best esports figures in the world, Adam has always been drawn to games with a competitive nature. You'll usually find him on Apex Legends (World's Edge is the best map, no he's not arguing with you about it), but he also dabbles in VALORANT, Super Smash Bros. Melee, CS:GO, Pokemon, and more. Ping an R-301.