Deadlock Street Brawl Tier List In June 2026: Paige, Graves, Seven, And A Different Meta
Street Brawl is not standard Deadlock with fewer players. Farming is off the table, resources are flattened, shopping is randomized, and Tracklock has Paige and Graves at the front.
Street Brawl is not standard Deadlock in a smaller jacket.
The Deadlock Street Brawl tier list should not be read like a standard-lane tier list with two players deleted. On June 16, 2026, Tracklock’s Street Brawl table had Paige at S+ with 60.40% win rate and 52.83% pick rate, followed by Graves at S+ with 58.65% win rate and 42.99% pick rate. Seven and Victor were the next visible S-tier names.
That mode-specific part is the whole story. Tracklock describes Street Brawl as a fast 4v4 mode played over best-of-five rounds, with rounds lasting only a couple of minutes. Farming is off the table, players start rounds on equal resources, and shopping is streamlined through a random item set that adds three items each round. That is not normal Deadlock. It is a different pressure cooker.
The June 16 Street Brawl Snapshot
The checked Tracklock table opened with Paige at 60.40% win rate and 52.83% pick rate, then Graves at 58.65% and 42.99%. Seven followed at 55.55% win rate and 47.14% pick rate. Victor sat at 55.26% win rate and 26.89% pick rate. Kelvin, McGinnis, Haze, Billy, Abrams, Warden, and Rem were also visible among the leading rows.
That spread already tells you the mode has its own appetite. Standard Deadlock rewards laning, farming, rotations, map economy, and long-form scaling. Street Brawl compresses the match into short rounds, equalized resources, random shopping, and constant fights. A hero who needs a slow runway can feel worse. A hero who brings immediate fight shape can look much better.
Why Paige And Graves Lead The Page
Paige leading the checked table makes sense in a mode where clean teamfight value arrives quickly. Graves sitting second also tracks with Street Brawl’s demand for repeated combat presence and compact fight impact. The point is not that both heroes are now “better” than everyone in every mode. The point is that Street Brawl strips out enough standard-match context to reward a different set of strengths.
That is also why Seven staying high matters. Seven has been a cross-tracker headline in standard hero tier lists, matchup data, and duo-synergy data. Seeing him remain strong in Street Brawl suggests the hero’s fight value travels well across formats, even after mode-specific tuning.
The June 11 Patch Caveat
The freshest official patch context is Valve’s Steam News item titled Minor Update – 06-11-2026. The Steam News API returned that post with a Street Brawl-specific change: all ability and item range/radius values are reduced by 10%.
That matters because range and radius are not decorative in Street Brawl. Shorter rounds and smaller fights already put pressure on spacing. A 10% range/radius reduction can change who gets reliable value, which items feel clean, and how much room long-range or area-control heroes get to breathe.
How To Use The Street Brawl Tier List
Start by refusing to import standard-mode assumptions. Paige, Graves, Seven, Victor, Kelvin, McGinnis, Haze, Billy, Abrams, Warden, and Rem being visible near the top of a Street Brawl page does not automatically rewrite your ranked-lane draft.
Then read pick rate with win rate. Paige’s checked pick rate was above 50%, which makes the top result harder to wave away. A lower pick-rate hero can still be strong, but you should ask whether the sample reflects broad use or specialized players.
Finally, keep the patch date in the same sentence as the number. The checked data came after Valve’s June 11 range/radius reduction, but Deadlock is still moving quickly. Street Brawl tables can age in dog years, and sometimes in patch-note minutes.
The Short Version
Tracklock’s June 16 Street Brawl snapshot had Paige and Graves as the two visible S+ leaders, with Seven and Victor close behind in S tier. Treat that as mode-specific guidance. Street Brawl has equal resources, no farming, random shopping, short rounds, and a fresh June 11 range/radius reduction from Valve, so its meta deserves its own table.
Source note: Tracklock Street Brawl data was checked on June 16, 2026. Valve’s June 11 Steam News item is used for official patch context. Tracklock is treated as a third-party tracker, not an official Valve tier list.