Everything you need to go from total newcomer to confident dynasty manager: drafts, scoring, formats, dynasty, Superflex, TEP, and best ball.
Fantasy football lets you draft real NFL players and score points based on what they actually do on the field — and dynasty takes that a step further by letting you keep your roster year after year. This guide covers everything a new manager needs: how drafts work, how scoring works, and how dynasty, Superflex, TE Premium, and best ball all fit together. Start here and you will be playing with confidence from day one.
Fantasy football lets you draft and manage a team of NFL players and score based on their real-life performance. Your running back grinds out 120 yards and two touchdowns on Sunday, you get full credit. Your wide receiver hauls in eight catches and goes for 110 yards, that goes on your scoreboard too. You compete against other managers in your league, rise through the standings, and chase a championship. That is the whole game, and it is the most popular fantasy sport in America for good reason.
Fantasy football is a game of roster management layered on top of real NFL games. You draft a team of real players, those players score fantasy points based on what they actually do on the field, and you compete against other managers each week. The higher your weekly total, the better your odds of winning the matchup.
Every major scoring event translates to points. A rushing touchdown is typically worth six points. A passing touchdown is usually four or six, depending on the league. Yards accumulate into bonus points. Receptions, in PPR leagues, add points per catch. By the time Sunday afternoon is over, your roster has a score, your opponent has a score, and one of you wins. Repeat for 13 or 14 weeks and the best records make the playoffs.
There are millions of fantasy football players in North America. Platforms are free and mobile-first. The NFL season is 18 weeks of appointment viewing. And the game has evolved far beyond casual office pools: deep dynasty leagues, premium communities, and multi-format ecosystems have turned fantasy football into a genuine year-round hobby for serious players.
Every league follows the same basic rhythm. It starts with the draft, which we cover in detail in the next section. Then you play a regular season of weekly head-to-head matchups, where you face one opponent and try to out-score them. Win enough matchups and you climb the standings. The top teams reach the playoffs, typically in Weeks 15 and 16 of the NFL season, and one manager lifts the championship.
Along the way you manage your roster. You add and drop players off the waiver wire, you make trades with other managers, and you set your lineup each week by choosing which eligible players to start. In a redraft league you start over each fall. In dynasty, your roster carries forward and your decisions compound year over year. The format you choose shapes everything about how the season feels.
Draft (August/September) → NFL Regular Season Weeks 1 to 13 or 14 → Fantasy Playoffs Weeks 15 to 16 → Championship → Offseason trades, rookie drafts, and waiver pickups in dynasty.
The draft is where your team is born. There are two main formats: the snake draft and the auction draft. Understanding the difference matters before you sit down for your first one.
In a snake draft, the pick order reverses each round. If you pick first in round one, you pick last in round two, then first again in round three. It keeps things fair by compensating managers who pick later with an earlier pick in the next round. This is the most common format, and it is the right starting point for beginners. Draft tools rank players for you, and you simply take the best available player at your position of need.
In an auction draft, every manager gets a fixed budget and bids on players openly. Anyone can have any player if they are willing to pay for them. This creates a more dynamic, skill-intensive experience because positional scarcity and budget allocation become live strategic decisions. It is more complex than a snake draft but deeply rewarding once you learn it.
Dynasty leagues typically use a long startup draft, which can run 20 to 30 rounds and builds every roster from scratch. After the startup, you only draft incoming NFL rookies each offseason. The startup is a landmark event in the life of a dynasty league, get the format right and take your time with it.
The scoring system is the single most important setting in any fantasy football league. It determines which players are valuable, which positions matter most, and how the whole game feels week to week. There are four dominant systems you need to know.
| Format | Reception Value | Who It Helps | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard | No bonus for catching passes | Running backs who carry the ball | Traditional leagues, power-back formats |
| Half-PPR | 0.5 points per reception | Balance across all skill positions | Most competitive leagues today |
| Full PPR | 1.0 point per reception | Pass-catchers, slot WRs, receiving backs | Pass-heavy, high-scoring league formats |
| TE Premium (TEP) | Extra 0.5 to 1.5 per TE reception on top of PPR | Elite pass-catching tight ends | Deep strategy leagues; NGNG default |
At NGNG we run Half-PPR with TE Premium, which is the competitive standard for serious dynasty leagues. It rewards pass-catching skills at every position while correcting the historic fantasy undervaluation of the tight end. We cover TE Premium in full detail in Section 11.
Every week you set a starting lineup from your roster. Players in your starting lineup score for you. Players on your bench do not. Getting your lineup right is one of the core weekly skills in fantasy football.
| Slot | Who Fills It | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| QB | Quarterback | Usually one starter; becomes two in Superflex |
| RB | Running Back | Typically two starters |
| WR | Wide Receiver | Typically two starters |
| TE | Tight End | One starter; boosted in TE Premium formats |
| FLEX | RB, WR, or TE | One extra starting spot, positional flexibility |
| Superflex | QB, RB, WR, or TE | Second QB slot; see Section 10 |
| K | Kicker | One starter; often drafted last |
| DST | Defense/Special Teams | One team defense; often streamed |
Bye weeks matter. When your starter's team has the week off, that player scores zero. Good managers monitor the schedule and have viable backup options on their bench for critical bye weeks, especially at quarterback. In dynasty leagues, roster depth at every position is the hallmark of a well-managed team.
The waiver wire is the pool of unowned players available to be added to your roster. It is one of the most active and contested parts of fantasy football, and working it well separates good managers from great ones.
Most competitive leagues use FAAB (Free Agent Acquisition Budget), which gives every manager a fixed dollar budget for the season, often $100 or $1,000. When you want a player off waivers, you place a blind bid. The highest bidder wins. Spend too freely early and you run dry when it matters. Hoard too much and you miss impact players. FAAB budget management is a real skill.
In dynasty, the waiver wire also includes players who clear waivers and become free agents, which means a player released by a dynasty team can be claimed immediately. Staying active on free agency is part of what keeps dynasty managers engaged all year, even in the offseason.
Trades are the lifeblood of competitive fantasy football. They let you convert surplus at one position into help at a position of need. They let you buy low on struggling veterans and sell high on hot streaks. In dynasty, they are how you execute a rebuild, acquire a cornerstone, or push a contending window open for one more season.
A few principles that hold up across every format:
Dynasty trade markets are more active and more consequential than redraft. You are not just trading for this season, you are shaping your roster for years. The managers who stay active, learn valuations, and build a reputation for honest dealing win more trades and build better teams.
Fantasy football uses a head-to-head format: each week you face one opponent, and the higher total wins the matchup. Win enough matchups and you earn a playoff berth. Typically the top four to six teams in a 10 to 12-team league qualify.
Playoff weeks usually run in the last two to three weeks of the NFL regular season, Weeks 14 to 16, to avoid the NFL playoff weeks when coaches rest starters. The championship is typically played in Week 16. Managing your roster to peak at the right time is part of the game. A manager who builds depth and stays healthy through December wins more championships than the one who stacks stars and runs out of roster.
Some leagues add a points-based tiebreaker or use total points scored for playoff seeding to reduce luck. Others use full total-points standings instead of win-loss records. Know your league settings before the season starts, because they shape how you should build your team.
The format choice is the one decision that defines everything else about your fantasy football experience. There are three families, and they ask for very different things from a manager.
| Format | What You Keep | Strategic Depth | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Redraft | Nothing; full new draft every season | Low to moderate | Casual players, beginners, low-commitment |
| Keeper | A small number of players each year | Moderate | Players wanting some continuity without full dynasty commitment |
| Dynasty | Entire roster forever | Very deep | Committed managers who want a year-round GM experience |
Redraft is the easiest entry point. You start fresh every fall, draft a new team, and compete for one season. There is no off-season management, no long-term roster building, and no penalty for quitting after one year. The trade-off is that the game resets to zero every September, which limits how deep the experience can go.
Dynasty is the deep end, and it is where the game becomes a long-term obsession in the best possible way. You keep your entire roster, draft incoming NFL rookies each spring, and build a franchise that can compete for years. The decisions you make today affect your team in 2028. That is the appeal and the hook. We cover dynasty in full in Section 13, and you can read more in our dedicated Dynasty vs. Redraft vs. Keeper guide.
Superflex is a lineup format that adds a second starting spot that can be filled by a quarterback instead of a third running back or wide receiver. It sounds like a small change. It rewrites every value chart in the draft.
In a standard format, quarterbacks score more points than any other position, but you only start one. That limits how much you should pay for a QB in the draft. In Superflex, two QBs can start, which means having a quality quarterback in your second starting slot is a real competitive advantage. Elite quarterbacks become the most coveted players in the entire draft. Two-QB investment at the top of your roster becomes essential strategy instead of a luxury.
Superflex formats mirror real NFL valuations more accurately than any other lineup structure. Quarterbacks are genuinely the most important players on the field, and Superflex reflects that. For dynasty, it creates a fascinating secondary market in backup QBs and aging veterans who still hold value as Superflex starters. Read our full Superflex Strategy guide for a complete breakdown of how to draft and build in this format.
TE Premium, abbreviated TEP, is a scoring modifier that awards bonus points for tight end receptions on top of the standard PPR value. A typical TEP rule adds 0.5 to 1.5 extra points per catch to tight ends only. In NGNG leagues we use TE Premium as a core scoring feature.
Why does it matter? In standard PPR formats, tight ends are systematically undervalued because they run fewer routes and catch fewer passes than wide receivers at the same position on the depth chart. The best tight ends in the NFL are genuinely elite receiving weapons, but their fantasy scoring rarely reflects that. TE Premium fixes the imbalance.
The practical effect is significant. Elite pass-catching tight ends become first-round dynasty assets instead of late second-round consolation picks. Weak tight end play becomes a genuine roster hole instead of a tolerable gap. And the entire draft board shifts, because every manager is competing for a position that now offers a real scoring premium. In leagues with TE Premium, finding and owning an elite TE early is one of the most important roster-building decisions you will make. For the full breakdown, read our TE Premium guide.
Best ball is a format where the platform automatically plays your highest-scoring lineup every week. There are no lineups to set, no waiver wire to work, no bye-week management, and no streaming. You draft your roster, walk away, and the optimal version of your team is automatically calculated after each week's games are played.
It sounds passive, but the strategy is deep: everything moves to the draft. You build the best possible roster with the right mix of positions, upside players, and schedule alignment. Every decision is front-loaded into draft day, which rewards preparation, research, and smart positional stacking.
Best ball is the most accessible format for beginners who want depth without the weekly time commitment. It is also a strong fit for dynasty over a long season, because it lets you focus on the part of the game that most rewards skill, roster construction, rather than the part that is most likely to cause burnout, daily management. Read our full Best Ball guide for a complete look at how the format works and how to draft it well.
Every format has its place, but dynasty is the one that turns casual players into committed franchise managers and keeps leagues alive for a decade or more. Here is why it wins for the long haul.
If you have ever wanted to feel like a real NFL general manager, dynasty is the format for you. It rewards patience, long-term thinking, and talent evaluation in a way no other format can touch. For a complete introduction to the dynasty mindset, read What Is Dynasty Fantasy Football.
No Guts No Glory is built for exactly the version of dynasty football described in this guide. We run a premium, 12-team deep-roster dynasty league with Half-PPR, TE Premium, and Superflex scoring, formats that reward real skill and football knowledge. We vet every manager before they join, which means the league is full of people who show up, pay up, and compete for years. The community is the foundation, and the foundation is what makes a dynasty league worth building.
The philosophy is simple: build the best roster, and do not babysit lineups every night. The skill that wins championships in dynasty is roster construction, talent evaluation, smart trades, and patience. Not who refreshed the waiver wire first or who made the most desperate Sunday-morning pickups. We lean into formats and community standards that reward the strategic layer, not the grind layer.
New to dynasty or just curious about what a premium league looks like? Start with our guides hub, read through the cornerstone articles, and come find us on Discord. Or go straight to the NGNG football league page to see what we have built.
Got a question, a counter-take, or a real-world example? Drop it in the football guides channel, that's where the football dynasty community talks shop.
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