Valorant My Card Guide 2026: Create, Share and Use Your Player Card
My VALORANT Card is Riot’s shareable profile feature for showing your rank, roles, playstyle and squad fit. Here is how to use it without oversharing, looking messy or joining the wrong stack.
Verified withRiot Patch 12.11My VALORANT CardRiot Account Support
My VALORANT Card launched with Patch 12.11. Use it to make a shareable player card that shows public playstyle signals such as rank, roles and squad preferences. It is best for finding teammates, but you should never share login details, recovery info or anything that exposes your Riot account.
What is My VALORANT Card?
My VALORANT Card is an official Riot feature launched in Patch 12.11. Riot describes it as a personalized card for showing your skill, personality and teammate fit. The goal is simple: make it easier to present who you are as a player and connect with people who match your stack.
Think of it like a clean player intro. Instead of typing a long post in Discord or dropping a random tracker screenshot, you can share a card that gives other players the basics at a glance: what kind of role you play, what rank range you fit and what sort of teammate you are looking for.
How to create My VALORANT Card
Riot directs players to mycard.playvalorant.com to create their card. Use your own Riot account, follow the site prompts and build a card that represents how you actually play. Do not let strangers “make it for you” if that means sharing a password or login code.
The exact card options can change over time, but the purpose is stable: highlight your player identity and make it easier for others to decide whether you fit their squad. Keep the card clear. If the card tries to say everything, it becomes less useful.
What should you show on your Valorant My Card?
A good card answers the questions teammates actually care about. Can you play smokes? Are you comfortable filling? Do you want serious ranked or relaxed unrated? Are you looking for a duo, trio or five-stack? Do you play in the same region and at similar times?
The best version of the card is honest. If you list yourself as a controller but dodge every smoke role in ranked, the card will attract the wrong people. If you exaggerate your rank or hide your weak role, the first few matches will expose it anyway.
| Card signal | Why it matters | Better wording |
|---|---|---|
| Rank range | Helps avoid lobbies that feel too easy or too stressful. | “Gold/Plat ranked, learning serious comms.” |
| Main role | Stacks need role balance more than five duelists. | “Controller main, can fill Sentinel.” |
| Region | Ping and server overlap matter. | “EU, mostly evening queue.” |
| Playstyle | Teammates need to know if you are loud, calm, serious or casual. | “Calm comms, no rage queue.” |
| Goal | Ranked grind and casual vibes attract different players. | “Looking for duo/trio for consistent ranked.” |
Privacy rules: what not to share on a My Card
Your card is meant to be shared, so treat it like public information. Do not include your Riot login email, recovery hints, screenshots of account settings, payment details, exact personal location or anything that helps someone take over or impersonate your account.
Also be careful with “teammate finder” DMs. A real teammate does not need your password, email code, recovery code or two-factor prompt. If someone asks for that, the conversation is already done.
How to use My VALORANT Card to find better teammates
Riot positions My VALORANT Card as a way to connect with players based on rank, roles to fill or general vibe. That is exactly where it can be useful. A clean card saves time because it filters out players who clearly want a different kind of queue.
If you want serious ranked, say so. If you want casual games, say that too. If you only play controller, be honest. A card that attracts the wrong teammates is not doing its job, even if it looks nice.
Using My Card for ranked stacks without creating drama
Ranked stacks usually fail for simple reasons: role overlap, different expectations, bad comms or one player wanting a sweat session while another wants relaxed games. My Card can reduce that friction if everyone uses it honestly.
Do not use the card to pretend you are a different player. If your peak rank was months ago and your current comfort is lower, be realistic. The point is to find teammates who work with your actual level today, not teammates who expect a version of you that no longer exists.
| Stack problem | How My Card helps | What to say |
|---|---|---|
| Too many duelists | Shows who can play smokes, initiator or sentinel. | “Controller main, comfortable on Omen/Brim.” |
| No comm style match | Sets expectations before the first game. | “Short comms, no tilt, review losses calmly.” |
| Different goals | Separates serious ranked from casual queue. | “Looking for stable ranked duo, 3 nights a week.” |
| Region mismatch | Avoids high-ping stack attempts. | “EU Frankfurt/London, evenings.” |
Common My VALORANT Card mistakes
The biggest mistake is turning a useful player card into a messy flex sheet. A good card helps teammates decide if they want to queue with you. It does not need to prove your entire VALORANT history.
| Mistake | Why it hurts | Better habit |
|---|---|---|
| Overloading the card | People cannot quickly understand your role or goal. | Keep the main message clear. |
| Exaggerating rank | Attracts teammates with the wrong expectation. | Use current comfort, not only old peak. |
| No region info | Creates ping and schedule problems. | List your main region and usual queue time. |
| Sharing private info | Can expose your Riot account. | Only share public playstyle details. |
What My Card teaches you about choosing a Valorant account
My Card is useful because it forces players to think beyond one screenshot. Rank is only part of the story. Role comfort, region, schedule, agent pool and attitude matter when finding teammates. The same logic applies when comparing Valorant accounts.
A practical account should fit how you actually play. If you are a controller main, unlocked controller agents matter. If you play EU, the account region matters. If you want a ranked grind, account level and ranked state matter. A pretty card or a shiny skin collection does not replace basic account fit.
My VALORANT Card checklist before you share
Before posting, scan the card like a teammate would. If someone can understand your rank range, role, region and queue goal in a few seconds, the card is doing its job.
| Check | Good sign | Fix if missing |
|---|---|---|
| Rank signal | Shows realistic current level. | Add current comfort range, not only peak. |
| Role signal | Teammates know what you play. | Name main role and backup role. |
| Region signal | Players know if servers match. | Add region or usual server group. |
| Goal signal | Clear ranked, casual or stack intent. | Say what queue partner you want. |
| Safety check | No private account data visible. | Remove login, recovery or payment clues. |
Ready to own your next account?
Choose a Valorant account that fits your region, role, rank comfort and agent pool instead of judging by one screenshot.
Valorant My Card FAQ
What is My VALORANT Card?
It is Riot’s personalized card feature from Patch 12.11 for showing your VALORANT skill, personality and teammate fit in a shareable format.
Where do I create My VALORANT Card?
Riot directs players to mycard.playvalorant.com to create the card, share it on socials and find new friends for their stack.
Do I need a Riot account?
Yes. Use your own Riot account and never share your login, email code or recovery information with someone offering to make the card for you.
What should I include on the card?
Use public teammate signals: rank range, role, region, queue goal, playstyle and what kind of stack you want.
Can My Card help me find teammates?
Yes. It is useful for showing what kind of player you are before someone invites you to a duo, trio or five-stack.
Should I use My Card as proof when buying an account?
No. Treat it as a public profile signal, not ownership proof. For account decisions, check region, access quality, account state and role fit carefully.
Where should you share your Valorant My Card?
Share the card where the right players can see it: your Discord server, trusted VALORANT communities, social profiles or group chats. If the platform is public, assume strangers will read it. Keep the card useful but not personal.
A good post gives context. Do not just drop the card and disappear. Add one short line about what you want: “Looking for EU ranked duo, controller main, usually online after 7 PM.” That makes the card easier to act on.