ParseCard

About ParseCard

ParseCard turns your Warcraftlogs reports into shareable Discord-style recap cards. Paste a log link, pick a fight, and get a downloadable image highlighting who carried, who clutched, and who face-planted into every avoidable mechanic. It is built for guild communities that want a quick, visual way to celebrate (and roast) their raid nights.

Why ParseCard Exists

Warcraftlogs is an incredible tool, but the data is dense. After a raid night, most players never dig past the summary screen. The best moments get buried in tables of numbers that only the most dedicated log-readers will ever see. ParseCard exists to surface those moments and make them shareable.

Instead of pasting a raw Warcraftlogs link in your guild Discord and hoping someone clicks it, you can share a card that instantly shows who earned the spotlight and who earned the ribbing. It turns a wall of data into a conversation starter.

How It Works

The process is simple. You paste any Warcraftlogs URL into ParseCard, choose which fight you want a card for, and the system does the rest. Behind the scenes, ParseCard fetches the fight data through the official Warcraftlogs API, runs it through six specialized award detectors, and generates a card with six awards highlighting standout performances.

Cards work for both raid encounters and Mythic+ dungeons across all difficulties. Whether it is a Mythic progression wipe or a clean Heroic farm kill, ParseCard analyzes the same underlying combat data and picks awards that reflect what actually happened in the fight. For a detailed walkthrough, see the How It Works guide.

The Award System

Every card features six awards chosen from a catalog of over 40 unique award types. Awards are split between praise and playful roasts at roughly a 60/40 ratio, with a rule that no single player can receive more than one roast per card.

Praise awards highlight genuinely strong play: top damage, clutch healing, clean mechanic execution, smart cooldown usage. Roast awards call out the avoidable stuff: unnecessary deaths, standing in fire, low activity, taking hits that should have been dodged. The roasts are always about in-game performance, never personal.

You can also choose a tone setting. Friendly keeps things light. Bold adds some edge. Brutal holds nothing back. The tone only changes the wording of awards, not which awards are selected, so the same fight always produces the same six awards regardless of tone. Read more in the Awards guide.

Character Profiles and Leaderboards

If you log in with Battle.net, you can claim your characters and build a profile that tracks your award history across every fight. See which awards you earn most often, how your performance trends over time, and share your profile with your guild.

ParseCard also maintains global leaderboards that rank characters by their award consistency. Rankings use a Bayesian scoring system that rewards players who perform well across many fights, not just those who got lucky on a single pull. Learn how scoring works in the Leaderboards guide.

Data and Privacy

ParseCard only uses publicly available data from the Warcraftlogs API. It never accesses your Battle.net characters or game data directly. The log data it reads is the same data anyone can see by visiting the Warcraftlogs report page. If you log in with Battle.net, your account information is used solely for character claiming and profile features. See the full Privacy Policy for details.

Free to Use

ParseCard is free. You get weekly credits to generate cards, and logging in with Battle.net unlocks additional credits. No payment is required to use the core card generation features. The weekly credit allowance resets every Tuesday at 15:00 UTC, aligned with the World of Warcraft weekly reset.

Not Affiliated with Blizzard

ParseCard is an independent community project. It is not affiliated with or endorsed by Blizzard Entertainment. All game data is sourced from publicly available Warcraftlogs reports through their official API. Character names, servers, and performance data come from combat logs that players have voluntarily uploaded to Warcraftlogs.