Jungle
Pathing, reset windows, objective setup, gank timing, and tempo trades.
Jungle coachingWild Rift role coaching works best when the session starts from the job you actually play in ranked. Jungle, mid, ADC, support, and Baron lane all lose games for different reasons. If the coaching ignores that, the advice becomes too general.
The goal is not to collect random tips for every role. The goal is to find the repeated mistake inside your role, then turn it into a clear practice rule for your next ranked block.
If you play one role most of the time, choose coaching for that role. A jungle replay should be reviewed through pathing, tempo, gank timing, and objective setup. An ADC replay should be reviewed through waves, recalls, positioning, damage windows, and fight discipline.
If you are swapping roles because you feel stuck, the first coaching topic may be role focus itself. A smaller role pool makes your games easier to compare and your mistakes easier to fix.
Jungle coaching usually starts with the first clear and the first two resets. Small pathing mistakes often become late dragon arrivals, weak Herald setup, bad gank timing, or forced fights that were never prepared.
A useful jungle review asks: did your clear match your lanes? Did your gank timing protect tempo or destroy it? Did you reset early enough before objectives? Were you trading the map on purpose, or just reacting late?
Mid lane coaching is rarely only about winning lane. Mid has to connect waves, roams, river movement, vision, and objective setup. If your wave is bad, your roam is already expensive before it starts.
Danny can review whether your move timers were real, whether you followed fights too late, and whether your lane pressure actually helped dragon, Herald, Baron, or side lanes.
ADC coaching focuses on dealing damage without giving the enemy a free opening. Many ADC players either play too scared and lose pressure, or step too far forward and make one death decide the game.
A good ADC replay shows wave control, recall timing, objective positioning, target selection, and late-game teamfight spacing. Mechanics matter, but the highest-value review often comes from where you stood before the fight started.
Pathing, reset windows, objective setup, gank timing, and tempo trades.
Jungle coachingWave timing, roam windows, matchup plans, river control, and objective movement.
Mid coachingPositioning, waves, recalls, damage windows, and teamfight discipline.
ADC coachingSupport coaching is about creating good fights before your team commits to them. Vision, roam timers, lane pressure, engage discipline, peel choices, and objective setup all decide whether your team can move first.
If every game feels like your team fights randomly, support review can show whether you had the earlier timing, whether your wards protected the correct angle, and whether your engage or peel choice matched the win condition.
Baron lane coaching often starts with matchup planning and wave control. A small wave mistake can remove your recall timing, kill your side-lane pressure, or force you into late grouping when the map needed something else.
Danny can review when you should freeze, slow push, crash, trade plates, group, split, flank, or hold side pressure. The point is to turn side-lane decisions into map pressure, not isolated duels.
If you do not know whether the problem is your role, macro, mechanics, or mental, start with a Wild Rift VOD review. One close loss usually reveals the pattern faster than guessing from memory.
Send your rank, main role, champion, server, and one question. For example: why did I lose pressure before dragon? Why did I keep dying before Baron? Why did my lane lead not become a win?
If you want to study first, Danny's Wild Rift Challenger/Sovereign PDF guide gives you a low one-time-cost system for role fundamentals, macro, VOD review, and ranked routines. It is not a boost, a rank guarantee, or account sharing. It is a learning system you keep using yourself.
That makes it a safer first purchase than chasing a rank shortcut. You can use the guide to mark your own replay, then bring a sharper question to coaching if you want Danny to review your exact game.
Choose the path that matches the mistake you can already feel. If objectives are always late, start with macro or jungle. If fights feel impossible despite good lane phases, start with role-specific VOD review. If tilt changes how you play after one loss, combine role coaching with mental review.
If you are still unsure, use the general Wild Rift coaching page or send one replay through free VOD review. Danny can tell whether a role page, macro coaching, 1v1 coaching, or a longer 2-hour session fits better.
Wild Rift role coaching focuses on the decisions that matter most for your main role, such as jungle pathing, mid wave timing, ADC positioning, support vision, or Baron lane wave control.
Start with the role you play most in ranked. If you are unsure, send a replay and Danny can help decide whether the main problem is role-specific, macro, mental, champion pool, or general VOD review.
Yes. Danny coaches jungle, mid, ADC, support, and Baron lane, then adjusts the session to your rank, champion pool, replay, and goals.
The PDF guide is a useful first step if you want a self-study system for role fundamentals, macro, VOD review, and ranked routines before booking a personal session.
Bring one ranked replay, your role, champion pool, and the mistake that keeps repeating. Danny can help turn it into a clearer plan for your next games.