About StatsWell

A simple way to keep track of what games are rising and falling on Steam, PlayStation, and Xbox.

What StatsWell Is

StatsWell started in March 2026 and is still in beta. It pulls together store charts and related game data from Steam, PlayStation, and Xbox so they are easier to read in one place. Instead of jumping between storefronts, you can check how a game is moving here and compare it with other games on the same page.

The site is not trying to guess everything from one number. It is meant to show movement over time: chart position, changes in rank, follower counts, and other signals that help explain whether a game is picking up speed or slowing down.

Why It Exists

A lot of this information is public, but it is scattered and awkward to follow. If you care about games, you often end up opening several store pages just to answer simple questions about what is doing well and what has changed.

StatsWell exists to make that easier. It is built for people who want a clearer daily picture of how games are performing, without turning everything into a pitch deck or pretending the numbers are more exact than they really are.

How To Use It

The homepage is the quickest place to start. From there, you can open the Steam, PlayStation, or Xbox pages and look at the charts in more detail. If a game catches your eye, open its page to see how its position has changed over time and what other data is available for it.

If you want more detail about how often the data updates, what is estimated, or what is covered, the FAQ explains that in plain terms.

Known Issues

Call of Duty titles are one of the hardest series to track cleanly right now. Activision packages some releases under a shared launcher known as Call of Duty HQ, which means individual games do not always appear as separate products in store ranking data. For instance, Modern Warfare III (2023) was often classified in backend databases like SteamDB as a "DLC" or "add-on" for the launcher rather than a standalone entry. This ecosystem, which currently houses Warzone and recent Black Ops entries, forces Activision to report financial performance as "Net Bookings" across the entire franchise instead of providing traditional unit sales. When that happens, tracking a single Call of Duty title on its own becomes impossible from the storefront data alone.

Xbox lists each of the many editions as separate entries (ultimate, goty, standard, console, definitive, premium, deluxe), which can make it hard to track them cleanly. For instance, a game might have separate entries for the base version, Game Pass version, and various bundles or editions. This can lead to fragmented data and make it difficult to get a clear picture of how a game is performing overall on the platform.