The battlefield quality of a room-scanned match starts before the app opens. AR tracking works by watching your room through the camera, and a few minutes of preparation is the difference between a rock-solid miniature world and one that needs coaxing.
Light the room
Tracking quality is mostly a lighting story. The camera needs to see surface detail to hold the world in place.
- Bright, even light is best. Turn on the room lights; open the curtains if it’s daytime.
- Avoid strong backlighting — a window as the only light source turns the rest of the room into silhouettes.
- Very dim or single-lamp rooms will track noticeably worse, especially during movement.
Give the battlefield a floor
The game builds your world on visible floor, and it fits your chosen battlefield size to the space you actually have.
- More visible floor = more room for the world. You don’t need an empty room — the game is built to fit real spaces — but pushing chairs in and clearing stray objects helps.
- Textured floors track better than featureless ones. Rugs, wood grain, and tile patterns give the camera detail to lock onto. A vast, perfectly uniform surface offers less to grip.
- Reflective and glass surfaces confuse depth. If your space allows, favor scanning across matte surfaces.
Move like a camera operator
During the boundary walk and during play:
- Steady, deliberate movement produces clean tracking. Whip-pans and sudden direction changes are the most common cause of drift.
- Keep the phone pointed where you’re working. The game follows your aim; sweeping the camera across the ceiling mid-scan adds noise.
- If tracking stumbles, slow down and let the camera see a detailed, well-lit part of the room for a moment. Recovery is normally quick.
Manage the phone itself
AR is one of the most demanding things a phone does. For longer sessions:
- Start with reasonable battery or play near a charger; AR sessions use meaningfully more power than typical apps.
- Warm phones throttle. If a long battle is planned, a case-free phone in a cool room performs better.
- Close heavyweight background apps if your device is older — memory pressure affects stability.
Respect the space
A short version of the full safety guidance, which is worth one real read:
- Know where furniture, stairs, pets, and other people are before you start.
- The game plays on your floor — you’ll look down and move around, so keep the walkway clear.
- Take breaks. Immersive play is more physical than it feels.
When the room fights back
Unusual spaces — L-shaped rooms, narrow layouts, cluttered corners — are supported, and the boundary tools let you adjust the play area the scan produced. If the battlefield lands somewhere odd or tracking keeps slipping, the AR & camera troubleshooting section walks through the common causes in order of likelihood.
One preparation pass is usually all it takes. After that, the room is a battlefield every time you open the app.