How to Play Position 1 Effectively
Learn farming patterns, power spikes, and when to join fights as a carry player. This comprehensive guide covers everything from laning stage to late-game decision making.
Read GuideEverything you need to improve your Dota 2 gameplay
In-depth guides for all 124 heroes including builds, combos, and counters.
Optimal item builds for every situation and role in the game.
Ward spots, jungle routes, Roshan timings, and map control strategies.
Team composition strategies and counter-picking guides.
Laning, teamfight, split-push, and late-game strategies.
Proven tips and mindset advice to gain MMR consistently.
Learn farming patterns, power spikes, and when to join fights as a carry player. This comprehensive guide covers everything from laning stage to late-game decision making.
Read GuideMaster the art of vision control with our updated warding guide. Learn optimal ward placements for every stage of the game and how to deward effectively.
Read GuideBreakdown of the strongest heroes, items, and strategies in the current patch. Stay ahead of the meta with our regularly updated analysis.
Read GuideStart your journey with these essential guides
Dota 2 is a multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) game where two teams of five players compete to destroy the opposing team's Ancient. Each player controls a powerful hero with unique abilities. The game features three lanes (top, mid, bottom), a jungle area with neutral creeps, and various objectives like Roshan and outposts.
Dota 2 has five positions, each with distinct responsibilities. Position 1 (Hard Carry) farms to become powerful late-game. Position 2 (Mid) controls the tempo. Position 3 (Offlaner) creates space. Position 4 (Soft Support) roams and ganks. Position 5 (Hard Support) provides vision and saves.
Improvement in Dota 2 comes from understanding game mechanics, developing good habits, and learning from mistakes. Focus on fundamentals like farming efficiency, map awareness, and communication with your team before trying advanced techniques.
Each position has unique responsibilities that contribute to team success
The primary damage dealer who farms efficiently in the early game to become the strongest hero in the late game. Carries need space and protection from their team to reach their power spikes.
Controls the game tempo from the middle lane. Midlaners gain levels quickly and use their advantage to gank side lanes or secure objectives. They often have high burst damage or playmaking abilities.
A durable frontliner who initiates fights and creates space for the carry. Offlaners typically build aura items and utility, disrupting the enemy carry's farm while being hard to kill.
A roaming playmaker who creates opportunities across the map. Position 4 heroes often have strong disables or damage early on and transition into utility roles as the game progresses.
The backbone of vision and protection. Hard supports buy wards, save allies with defensive abilities, and sacrifice their own farm to ensure the carry has a good game.
Check the minimap every 3-5 seconds. Missing enemy heroes on the map means danger. Always carry a TP scroll to respond to ganks or tower dives on your teammates.
Never stop farming, even when looking for fights. Stack camps, push waves before rotating, and always have a plan for where your next gold is coming from.
Know when your hero is strongest relative to the enemy. Fight during your power spikes and avoid fights when the enemy has theirs.
Use pings, chat wheel, and voice to coordinate with your team. Call missing heroes, share your intentions, and stay positive even when behind.
In teamfights, focus on the right targets. Usually this means disabling or bursting the enemy's key heroes first.
After winning a fight, always take an objective: tower, Roshan, or map control. Kills without objectives don't win games.