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Party and Matchmaking
April 5, 2026 at 12:32 AM
Remove irrelevant image: Scenic open world landscape - does not show party or matchmaking features
Honor of Kings: World places heavy emphasis on cooperative play, and its party and matchmaking systems are designed to make grouping up as frictionless as possible. Whether players want to team up with friends or find strangers for a dungeon run, the game provides multiple tools to streamline the process. From rank-based matchmaking to innovative features like the link mechanism and one-click gather, every aspect of the party system is built to reduce downtime and keep players in the action.
The matchmaking system uses a rank-based algorithm that considers player level, gear score, and recent performance when assembling groups for instanced content. This ensures that players are matched with others of roughly comparable capability, reducing the chance of mismatched groups where one player significantly outgears or undergears the rest. The system applies to dungeon queues, raid matchmaking, and PvP modes.
For open-world cooperative content, matchmaking is less restrictive. Players can freely group with anyone in the same zone regardless of level difference, though the game applies level-scaling to keep encounters challenging for all participants. This open grouping philosophy encourages spontaneous cooperation during world events and open-world boss encounters.
The link mechanism is one of Honor of Kings: World's most distinctive party features. When two players are linked (either through a friends list connection or a party setting), approaching a linked teammate in the open world automatically joins their current mission or activity. There is no need to manually accept an invitation or navigate through menus. The system dynamically adjusts rewards when a linked player joins mid-mission, ensuring that both participants receive appropriate loot and experience rather than splitting a fixed pool.
This approach removes one of the most common friction points in cooperative open-world games: the need to coordinate mission states before playing together. If a linked friend is fighting a world boss, simply running toward them is enough to join the encounter. The link mechanism was specifically designed to make cooperative play feel natural and spontaneous rather than requiring constant communication and menu navigation.
The one-click gather function allows a party leader to teleport all squad members to a designated location instantly. Rather than waiting for everyone to manually travel to a dungeon entrance or meeting point, the leader selects a location and triggers the gather command. All party members receive a prompt, and upon accepting, they are transported to the leader's position.
This feature dramatically reduces the time spent waiting for party members to assemble, which is especially valuable when group members are spread across different regions of the map. It also serves a practical role during time-sensitive activities like world boss spawns, where arriving quickly can make the difference between participating and missing the encounter.
After completing instanced content such as dungeons, raids, or PvP matches, the game displays detailed team statistics for all participants. These breakdowns include damage dealt, damage taken, healing provided, crowd control applied, and other metrics relevant to the encounter. The statistics screen helps players understand their contribution to the team effort and identify areas for improvement.
The statistics display is informational rather than competitive. It does not publicly rank players by performance or penalize lower-performing members. Instead, it serves as a learning tool that encourages players to experiment with different Flow style combinations and team compositions to improve their collective results.
At the end of group content, players can send a "like" to teammates whose play they appreciated. Receiving likes accumulates toward a social reputation score that is visible on the player's profile. The like system is entirely positive (there is no dislike option) and provides a lightweight way to acknowledge good teamwork, skilled play, or helpful behavior.
Frequent like recipients may gain access to minor social rewards such as profile badges or cosmetic titles. The system encourages positive social interactions and gives players a reason to be helpful and cooperative beyond the inherent gameplay rewards.
Standard parties support up to four players for most open-world and dungeon content. Raid content scales to eight players. The game does not enforce role restrictions (tank, healer, DPS), but the dual-class system and diverse Flow styles naturally encourage varied team compositions. Players who bring complementary styles, such as pairing ranged DPS with a support healer, will generally find group content more manageable than teams of four identical builds.