Quick answer: The best Brawlers for Bounty are survival-first picks like Piper, Belle, Mandy, Angelo, Gene, R-T, Brock, and Nani because every death changes the star count and a 1-for-1 trade is losing when you are ahead.
Bounty is a mode where you finish the timer with more stars than the enemy team, and the first 30 seconds set the shape of the match. The best drafts do not start with a favorite brawler; they start with 3 questions: which lane must be won, which objective tool is mandatory, and which enemy pick becomes unplayable if you save the final counter slot.
What Makes a Brawler Good in Bounty?
Bounty rewards brawlers that convert one lane win into objective progress. A good Bounty pick does 2 jobs at once: it survives the first fight and creates pressure without needing all 3 teammates to babysit it.
The role split matters more than a generic tier label. Your team needs 1 stable first pick, 1 map-specific pressure pick, and 1 counter-pick that punishes the enemy's final composition. Belle, Piper, Gene are safer early picks; R-T, Brock, Nani become stronger once you can see the enemy plan.
Want this checked against your own account?
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Which Brawlers Are Best for Bounty Right Now?
Bounty picks should be sorted by map fit before raw popularity. The table below is a practical Ranked-first board: it tells you when to take each brawler, not just whether the brawler is strong in a vacuum.
| Brawler | Draft timing | Best use | Risk check |
|---|---|---|---|
| Early or mid pick | Bounty maps that reward control and safe pressure | Safe into most drafts | |
| Early or mid pick | Bounty maps that need burst, speed, or anti-dive | Safe into most drafts | |
| Early or mid pick | Bounty maps that reward control and safe pressure | Safe into most drafts | |
| Map-dependent pick | Bounty maps that need burst, speed, or anti-dive | Check bans and enemy counters first | |
| Map-dependent pick | Bounty maps that reward control and safe pressure | Check bans and enemy counters first | |
| Map-dependent pick | Bounty maps that need burst, speed, or anti-dive | Check bans and enemy counters first | |
| Late counter-pick | Bounty maps that reward control and safe pressure | Check bans and enemy counters first | |
| Late counter-pick | Bounty maps that need burst, speed, or anti-dive | Check bans and enemy counters first |
Do not treat this as a blind lock list. A Rico on a bounce map can be the best brawler in the lobby, while the same Rico on an open map can lose 2 lanes at once. If your account is thin, run your player tag through the Brawler Map Checker and identify which of these picks actually covers your current map gaps.
How Should You Draft Bounty in Ranked?
Bounty drafting starts with bans because a single unchecked specialist can decide all 3 games in a best-of-3 series. Ban the brawler that invalidates your best lane plan, then pick a safe brawler that remains useful if the enemy answers with range, dive, or sustain.
What Should You First Pick in Bounty?
Bounty first picks should be stable across at least 2 map shapes. Belle, Piper, and Gene are strong first-pick candidates when they cannot be hard-countered by 1 obvious enemy response.
What Should You Save for Last Pick in Bounty?
Bounty last picks should attack the enemy's 1 exposed weakness. R-T, Brock, and Nani are better late than early because they punish a revealed comp instead of guessing into 3 unknown picks.
What Should You Ban in Bounty?
Bounty bans should be tied to the map pool. On a wall-heavy map, remove the best wall abuser; on an open map, remove the strongest range carry; on a tank-friendly map, remove the one anti-tank your own team cannot beat.
Which Map Traits Matter Most in Bounty?
Bounty maps are not interchangeable. A good draft changes when the map changes, even if the mode stays the same for 3 straight games.
| Map trait | Best brawler types | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Long open lanes | Range advantage creates safe stars without crossing mid. | |
| Breakable cover | Wall break removes the enemy safe angle. | |
| Bush pockets | Vision and pull threat stop assassin flanks. |
A written map plan beats memory. Before a Ranked session, write 3 names for each active Bounty map: first pick, backup pick, and ban. That 3-name sheet prevents the panic drafts that turn a playable map into a 0-2 series.
What Team Compositions Work Best in Bounty?
Bounty comps work when every slot has a different job. Three lane winners with no objective piece are as flawed as three objective brawlers with no lane control.
| Comp style | Slot 1 | Slot 2 | Slot 3 | Win condition |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Long-range lock | Protects the lead and punishes overextension. | |||
| Wall-break pressure | Turns covered maps into open maps by minute 1. | |||
| Anti-flank | Denies Mortis, Kit, and Fang entries. |
Use comp labels as draft checks, not as rigid recipes. If your first 2 picks already cover pressure and defense, the third pick should solve the matchup in front of you. If your first 2 picks duplicate the same job, the third pick has to repair the draft instead of chasing comfort.
How Should You Play the First 30 Seconds in Bounty?
Bounty games are often decided before the first Super appears. The opening 30 seconds decides lane control, ammo advantage, and which team gets to choose the next fight. Your first job is to take the lane that matches your range, not to sprint straight at the objective with all 3 players.
Start with a 3-lane spread unless the map clearly demands a 2-1 overload. The middle player should scout the highest-value route, while the 2 side players test enemy range without spending all 3 ammo. If your team wins 2 lanes, convert immediately into finish the timer with more stars than the enemy team; if your team loses 2 lanes, back up and reset before the enemy chains Supers.
The most reliable opening rule is simple: do not be the first player to die for no objective value. A first death gives the enemy position, Super charge, and 5-8 seconds of numerical advantage. In Bounty, that usually turns into one decisive objective swing.
How Should You Assign Lanes in Bounty?
Bounty lane assignment should follow matchup, not spawn order. Put your longest-range brawler into the longest lane, your control brawler into the lane with walls or bushes, and your counter-pick into the lane where its target must appear.
| Lane problem | Best answer | Why it works |
|---|---|---|
| Enemy outranges your lane | Rotate a faster brawler or wall-break support | Range disadvantage gets worse after 2 lost trades. |
| Enemy hides in bushes | Use reveal, splash, or a durable scout | Blind checks feed Supers and lose first position. |
| Enemy tank walks forward | Put R-T or Brock into that lane | Anti-tank value is wasted on the wrong side of the map. |
| Enemy thrower controls a wall | Send wall break, jump, pull, or speed | A thrower behind cover turns 1 lane into 2 lanes of pressure. |
Switch lanes after one clear mismatch. Waiting 3 deaths before rotating gives the enemy enough Super charge to win even after you finally fix the lane.
How Do You Counter the Most Common Bounty Drafts?
Bounty counterplay starts by identifying the enemy win condition. A damage-race comp wants fast objective pressure, a control comp wants repeated mid fights, and a pick comp wants 1 isolated target. Once you name the enemy plan, your team can deny the one action that plan requires.
Against damage races, defend only long enough to break the first push, then counterpush with all 3 players. Against control comps, stop walking into the same choke and force a side-lane rotate. Against assassin comps, group in pairs, keep 1 peel tool ready, and make the assassin spend a Gadget or Super before your carry crosses mid.
The strongest counter is often patience. A Kit, Mortis, Fang, or Edgar draft loses power when your team refuses isolated 1v1s for 20 seconds. A Rico or Brock draft loses power when your team stops feeding the same wall angle. A Piper or Mandy draft loses power when speed and cover deny clean first shots.
What Should You Track After Each Bounty Match?
Bounty review should be short enough that you actually do it. Track 4 numbers after a serious session: first deaths, objective conversions, bad drafts, and lost final fights. Those 4 notes reveal whether the issue is mechanics, map fit, or decision-making.
| Review note | Good target | What it reveals |
|---|---|---|
| First deaths | 0-1 per 5 games | Positioning and matchup discipline. |
| Objective conversions | 2+ per win | Whether lane wins become real progress. |
| Bad drafts | 0-1 per session | Whether prep is beating panic picks. |
| Lost final fights | Under 2 per session | Whether you close games cleanly. |
Do not review every shot. Review the repeatable loss. If the same brawler beats you 3 times, it belongs on the ban list. If the same map beats you twice, it belongs in the Brawler Map Checker review before your next upgrade.
What Is the 7-Day Bounty Practice Plan?
Bounty practice works best in 7 small blocks. Day 1 is map scouting: write the 3 strongest brawlers and 2 bans for every active Bounty map. Day 2 is first-lane discipline: play 5 games where the only goal is avoiding the first death. Day 3 is objective conversion: review every time your team wins a lane and fails to score progress.
Day 4 is counter-pick practice with R-T, Brock, Nani. Day 5 is safe-pick practice with Belle, Piper, Gene. Day 6 is duo or trio queue, where you call roles before the match starts. Day 7 is review: keep the 3 brawlers that worked, drop the 1 brawler that repeatedly failed the map, and update your ban sheet.
This plan improves Ranked and ladder at the same time because it trains decisions that survive balance patches. Aim gets rusty; a good map-read habit keeps working.
How Should a Duo or Trio Communicate in Bounty?
Bounty communication should be short enough to say before the first fight. Use 4 calls: lane, target, reset, and objective. "I take left," "ban Rico," "reset for Super," and "play objective now" are better than a 20-second argument about a tier list.
The best duo/trio habit is assigning the risky job before the match starts. One player handles the carrier, one player handles the first engage, and one player watches the counter lane. If nobody owns the risky job, all 3 players react late and the enemy gets the first clean objective window.
| Callout | When to use it | Good example |
|---|---|---|
| Lane | Spawn and after each death | "Max left, Rico mid, Gale right." |
| Target | Enemy overextends | "Collapse on Piper after ammo 2." |
| Reset | Team loses shape | "Back up 5 seconds, wait for Gene pull." |
| Objective | Fight is won | "Score now," "hold 10," or "go safe." |
How Does Bounty Change by Account Stage?
Bounty advice changes as your roster grows. A new account should learn 2 safe brawlers and 1 counter. A mid-game account should build 4-5 mode-ready options. A Mythic+ account should prepare bans, backups, and matchup swaps for every active map.
| Account stage | Target pool | Main priority |
|---|---|---|
| New player | 2-3 brawlers | Learn objective and lane basics. |
| Early Ranked | 4-5 brawlers | Add backups for bans and bad maps. |
| Mythic push | 6+ brawlers | Cover counters and every map trait. |
| Legendary+ | 8+ brawlers | Draft around enemy picks and teammates. |
Do not copy a Masters roster before your account can support it. A smaller pool played on correct maps beats a larger pool of underbuilt brawlers forced into every rotation.
Which Upgrades Matter Most for Bounty?
Bounty upgrades should follow the jobs that appear most often in your match history. If you lose because you cannot defend, upgrade a counter-pick. If you lose because you win lanes but never convert, upgrade an objective brawler. If you lose because your best pick is banned, upgrade the backup before chasing a new specialist.
The best upgrade test is whether a brawler improves at least 2 maps in the active pool. Belle and Piper style picks often pass that test because they work in several drafts. Narrow brawlers pass only when the map pool gives them repeated value.
| Upgrade reason | Good signal | Bad signal |
|---|---|---|
| First pick | Useful before seeing enemy comp | Needs last pick every time. |
| Backup pick | Replaces a banned main pick | Covers only 1 rare map. |
| Counter-pick | Beats a common enemy pattern | Wins only when enemy drafts badly. |
| Specialist | Dominates 2+ active maps | Playable on 1 map and weak elsewhere. |
Upgrade for repeated decisions, not one memorable loss. A brawler that fixes 3 common drafts is worth more than a brawler that would have saved 1 tilted game.
How Do You Close Winning Bounty Games?
Bounty games are lost most often after a team has already done the hard part. Closing means spending the final 30 seconds on the win condition, not on one more unnecessary fight. If your team has the advantage, force the enemy to cross the worst lane and spend resources first.
The closing rule is different from the opening rule. Early game rewards information; late game rewards denial. Hold the strongest angle, keep 1 ammo for the emergency dive, and do not chase a low-health enemy if the objective is already secured.
When in doubt, count the score condition out loud: goals, gems, stars, zone percent, safe health, or round count. A team that knows the number usually beats a team chasing the last elimination.
What Are the Most Common Mistakes in Bounty?
Mistake 1 - picking comfort over the map: Bounty drafting fails when the pick ignores 2 fixed map traits: lane length and wall density. Replace the comfort pick with 1 brawler that wins the visible lane, then use the final 2 picks to cover the objective.
Mistake 2 - building three copies of one role: A 3-brawler team with no carrier, no wall break, or no anti-tank tool loses before the first fight. Lock 1 lane winner, 1 objective piece, and 1 counter-pick in every draft.
Mistake 3 - upgrading specialists before flex picks: A brawler playable on 2 maps is a luxury slot, while a flex pick playable in 3 modes keeps your account alive through bans. Build 8-10 flexible Power 11 options before chasing 1 narrow favorite.
Mistake 4 - ignoring the first 15 seconds: The first lane trade decides most Bounty games because it sets ammo, Super charge, and spawn timing. Spend the first 15 seconds winning position, not fishing for a highlight elimination.
Mistake 5 - playing after two tilted losses: Two straight losses usually means the next draft is rushed and the next lane choice is emotional. Stop after 2 bad series, review the 3 maps that beat you, then queue when the plan is specific again.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is the safest Bounty pick?
Bounty safe picks are Belle, Piper, Gene, and R-T because they can deal damage without donating stars. The safer pick is usually better than the flashier pick once your team leads by 2 stars.
How do you protect a Bounty lead?
Bounty leads are protected by retreating together, holding 2 angles, and refusing 1-for-1 trades in the final 30 seconds. A 1-star lead is enough when the enemy must walk into your range.
Are assassins good in Bounty?
Assassins are good in Bounty only when the enemy drafts 2 or 3 fragile long-range brawlers with no peel. Into Gene, R-T, Sandy, or Shelly, the assassin usually feeds the first 2 stars.
How many Bounty brawlers should I upgrade?
Bounty needs at least 3 playable Power 11 brawlers if you care about Ranked bans. Build 1 safe pick, 1 map specialist, and 1 counter-pick before upgrading a second favorite.
What should I ban in Bounty?
Bounty bans should remove the strongest map-specific win condition, not the brawler you dislike most. Ban 1 pick that your team cannot answer across all 3 lanes.
Does the Brawler Map Checker help with Bounty?
The Brawler Map Checker helps with Bounty by comparing your owned brawlers against the current map pool. Use it before spending resources so your next upgrade covers 2 or more weak maps.

