At midnight UTC the daily seed rolls over, and from that moment every player in the world draws the exact same sequence of teams. Same spins, same player pools, same re-roll decisions to agonize over. Whatever record you post, you earned it on a level field — the leaderboard is a fair fight by construction.
The leaderboard doesn't trust your browser. When you submit a run, the server recomputes your season from the twelve players you actually drafted and posts that result. Edited scores and inspect-element heroes bounce off; the names at the top of the board got there by drafting.
Play the daily on consecutive days and your streak counts up — miss a midnight and it resets to one. The daily takes about three minutes, which is exactly the right size for a habit: coffee, spin, draft, submit. A long streak also means you've faced every kind of board — QB droughts, loaded ’90s spins, defense-only days — and survived them all.
Some days the seed deals three legend quarterbacks and the board separates on defense; some days there's one great QB window and everyone who missed it plays for 18. Reading what kind of day it is — then spending your re-rolls accordingly — is the skill that separates streak-holders from tourists. Warm up with a free run in the draft game, then come back and post your real score.
Midnight UTC, every day. The countdown on the home screen shows time remaining on the current board.
Yes — the day’s seed generates the spin sequence, so every player worldwide drafts from identical boards. Skill is the only difference.
Submitted lineups are re-simulated on the server, and only the server’s computed record counts. A claimed score that doesn’t match the lineup is discarded.
It resets. One daily per calendar day (UTC) keeps it alive — the run itself takes about three minutes.