Why quarterbacks rule Superflex dynasty leagues, and how to build a roster that never blinks at the position.
In Superflex dynasty, you start two quarterbacks every week — which means QBs are twice as scarce, twice as valuable, and twice as critical to stockpile than in standard formats. The winning strategy is to secure two or three QBs early in your startup draft, accept the premium cost, and protect that depth all season long. Everything else — skill positions, trade targets, waiver picks — follows from building an unbreakable quarterback room first.
In a Superflex league, the flex spot can be filled by a quarterback, which means nearly every team starts two quarterbacks every single week. That one rule rewrites the entire value board. This is the strategy guide for dominating a Superflex dynasty format like No Guts No Glory.
A Superflex (SF) lineup adds a flex position that accepts a QB, RB, WR, or TE. Because quarterbacks out-score every other position in standard scoring, almost every manager slots a second quarterback there. In a 12-team league that locks up to 24 quarterbacks into starting lineups each week, against an NFL pool of roughly 32 starters. Demand for the position nearly doubles overnight, and the math never stops favoring QBs.
Scarcity creates value. With two dozen QBs needed as weekly starters plus backups and bye-week fill-ins, the position dries up fast in any draft or trade market. Quarterbacks also carry the longest careers and the steadiest week-to-week floor of any position, which makes a young franchise QB the single most valuable asset you can own in SF dynasty. Where a running back might give you three elite years, a quarterback can anchor your lineup for a decade.
In NGNG’s inaugural season, quarterbacks claimed six of the seven richest waiver bids, including a $951 panic-bid on Jake Browning after Joe Burrow went down in Week 2. When you wait on QB, that is the bill that eventually comes due.
Your startup draft is where Superflex titles are quietly won or lost. The managers who walk away with a stable quarterback room spend the next several years playing a different game than everyone scrambling on waivers.
Three quarterbacks is the sweet spot in Superflex dynasty: two starters and an insurance arm. Injuries and byes wreck SF lineups faster than any other format, and the manager holding a viable third QB never has to throw $900 of waiver budget at a streamer in a panic. Treat your QB depth like a moat, not a luxury.
The trade market for quarterbacks in Superflex is unlike any other position in any other format. In single-QB leagues, quarterbacks change hands infrequently because managers only need one, and the supply of viable starters is large enough that desperation rarely sets in. In Superflex, the demand for quarterbacks is so concentrated that the market behaves more like the market for elite tight ends in TEP: thin supply, inelastic demand, and severe premium pricing for anything above average.
The practical consequence is that quarterback trades in Superflex almost always cost more than the calculator says they should. A manager giving up an SF QB1 knows they are depleting one of the most irreplaceable assets on their roster, and they will not do it at fair value. They will do it at a premium, or not at all. If you are trying to acquire a franchise QB in Superflex through a trade, budget accordingly: expect to pay an early first-round pick plus a meaningful additional piece for any QB who projects as a multi-year starter. The managers who wait for a calculator-fair deal on a Superflex QB often wait forever.
The young-versus-veteran QB debate is especially important in dynasty Superflex because the format's long time horizon amplifies the gap between the two. A 24-year-old franchise QB with developing mechanics and a favorable situation is not just a starter, he is a decade of QB1 production locked onto your roster at the cost you paid on draft day. A 32-year-old veteran who is producing at an elite level right now carries the same salary cap hit and the same roster slot with a two-to-four-year productive window before decline accelerates.
In most cases, the young QB is the better dynasty asset even if the veteran is performing better today. The dynasty tax on aging quarterbacks is real and underappreciated because the NFL's visibility bias pushes older star QBs into the public conversation constantly. The instinct to acquire the proven name over the developing youth is a redraft instinct. Dynasty rewards the manager who sees through it and builds a QB room with a ten-year time horizon, not a two-year one. The one exception: if your window is genuinely now, a veteran QB at peak form can be the right piece to complete a championship roster even knowing you will need to address the position again in two years.
In NGNG's inaugural season, quarterbacks claimed six of the seven richest waiver bids, including the league-record $951 on Jake Browning after Joe Burrow went down. Every one of those bids was a manager without enough QB depth paying the emergency price. Own your QB room before the injury happens, not after.
Three quarterbacks is the correct target depth for a Superflex dynasty roster: two genuine starters and one viable backup. The reasoning is simple: NFL injuries are not optional, bye weeks create forced lineup gaps, and the Superflex waiver market for QBs is the most competitive and expensive in the format. The manager with three QBs faces a bye week with a scheduled swap. The manager with two faces an injury with a $500 bid war.
The third quarterback does not need to be a franchise-level asset. His job is to be good enough to start at the Superflex slot during your QB1 or QB2's absence without costing you the week. A young mobile quarterback with a high rushing floor, a reliable game manager in a pass-volume offense, or a veteran backup with a starter-level situation fills this role adequately. What he cannot be is a replacement-level arm who costs you eight to ten points every week he starts. The difference between a viable third QB and a weak one is typically two to three points per game, which sounds small until you miss the playoffs by one game in a week you were forced to start him.
Scoring context matters more in Superflex than in any other format because the QB position is so central to roster construction that small scoring differences compound into large value distinctions. NGNG awards passing touchdowns at the standard value used in most competitive Superflex leagues, and that scoring structure is what drives the position's dominance in the waiver and trade markets. A quarterback throwing 35 touchdowns in a season generates massive raw scoring totals before you add rushing yards and any bonus structures.
The implication for roster construction: the highest-ceiling Superflex quarterbacks in dynasty are dual-threat passers with high volume and a favorable touchdown rate. A quarterback who throws 500 passes in a season but only converts 20 touchdowns is less valuable in Superflex than a quarterback who throws 450 passes and converts 35. Volume matters, but touchdown efficiency is the multiplier. When evaluating QBs for trade acquisition, look at touchdown rate (touchdowns per attempt) alongside raw volume. The two metrics together give you a more complete picture of scoring potential than either one alone.
The proactive management of your QB room across a 17-game season is where Superflex titles are preserved or lost. The managers who address QB depth before they need it pay fair prices. The managers who address it after an injury pay emergency prices. Two planning tasks keep you ahead of the crisis curve.
The most underappreciated consequence of the Superflex format is not what it does to quarterback value, it is what it does to every other position. By consuming two starting roster slots with QBs and pricing the position so high that draft capital floods toward it, Superflex effectively compresses the supply of early-round value available for wide receivers and running backs. The same managers competing for a second starting QB in rounds two and three are managers who, in a single-QB format, would be drafting elite skill positions in those rounds.
This creates a downstream effect where WR and RB values in Superflex are slightly more democratized than in standard formats. There are fewer elite early picks available for skill positions because the early capital is QB-absorbed, which means the mid-round tier of wide receivers and running backs holds more relative value than it does in 1QB. The practical takeaway: in a Superflex startup or trade market, do not undervalue the second and third tier at skill positions. The manager who locks in QB depth and then harvests mid-round WR and RB value systematically outperforms the one chasing the same scarce top-3 skill position names that everyone else is bidding on. Deep Superflex rosters are built in the middle rounds, after the QB room is secured.
No Guts No Glory dynasty football is full Superflex with TE Premium scoring, which makes elite quarterbacks and elite tight ends the two scarcest, most valuable buckets on the board. Quarterbacks are currency here. Want proof? Study how QB-heavy deals reshaped the league in The League Ledger, then read up on how to value those trades before you make your next one.
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