As you play, your great moments live on as clips, but the flow that actually produced those moments quickly fades from memory. To look up how many kills you got or what the score was in that match, you have to keep switching between the clip and your match history. DOR places these two things side by side on one screen so you can review your best moments together with that match's data.
What You Miss When You Only Watch the Clip
A clip is the highlight of a result. The flashy moment is captured well, but the earlier decisions that created it and the flow of the entire match live outside the clip. Whether a great super play actually came in a match your team was already winning, or turned around a losing situation, changes its meaning entirely.
DOR Shows Clips and Match Records Side by Side
When you open a clip in DOR, the record from that same match is displayed alongside it on one side of the screen. As you play back the clip, you can check that match's KDA, scoreboard, and key stats, so there's no need to switch windows to move between the moment and the data.
- KDA: see the kills, deaths, and assists you recorded in that match at a glance
- Scoreboard: compare each team's score and the flow of rounds alongside the clip
- Match stats: check indicators that summarize the whole match, such as damage dealt and win/loss
- Gather clips from multiple matches and compare them together with their stats

Review This Way and the Flow Becomes Clear
When you gather clips from the matches that went well and the ones that didn't and view them alongside the stats, it becomes clear where the difference in results came from. Even for the same great moment, the matches with good stats often show you had already secured the early flow, while in the disappointing matches you can see that only one moment was good and the overall metrics didn't follow.
- Good matches: check whether the stats beside your highlight clip are generally stable
- Disappointing matches: pinpoint where the score slipped even though there was a good moment
- Recurring patterns: spot the stretches where you break down similarly across multiple matches
Try Using It This Way for Each Game
In Valorant, where the outcome is decided round by round, the scoreboard beside the clip is great for pinpointing which round the momentum shifted, and in League of Legends, where a single match runs long, you can watch the changes in KDA and match stats to review your engagement decisions.
In Closing
Great moments stick in your memory, but what actually raises your skill is the moment you understand the context those moments came from. When you put your clips and that match's record side by side in DOR, your highlights become more than something to show off. They become review material for your next match. Starting with today's games, open your clips and stats together.


