Practical guide

How to Use the Fortnite Sprite Checklist

The Sprite Checklist turns a collection that is easy to lose track of into a simple routine: mark what you own, narrow the list to what is missing, choose a realistic target, and keep a backup before changing devices. The tool works without an account. Your normal progress stays in the browser you are using, so you can begin as soon as the tracker opens.

Start with the released checklist

The default view focuses on entries treated as currently released. This is the most useful place to build a real collection record because upcoming or unavailable entries do not lower the percentage. Scan the cards and mark each Sprite you already have. A marked card updates the collected total, family progress, missing list, and next target suggestions at the same time.

Do not worry about choosing the perfect order. A quick first pass is better than trying to reconstruct every detail from memory. Mark the obvious entries, then use search and family details for the uncertain ones. If you click an entry by mistake, click it again to remove it. The tracker saves ordinary changes locally after they are made.

Use filters to answer one question at a time

A complete grid is useful for orientation but noisy for planning. Switch to Missing only when the question is simply “What do I still need?” Use the text search for a Sprite name or family when checking a screenshot, a note from a friend, or the result of a match. Variant and rarity filters reduce the list further when you are comparing similar-looking cards.

Filters do not delete progress. They only change what is visible. If a collected card appears to have vanished, clear the search and filters or return to the all-items view before changing your saved data. The item may be hidden because the page is showing missing entries, a different variant, or only incomplete families.

Choose a next chase that matches the session

“Rarest missing” is useful when you want the most ambitious remaining target, but it is not always the most efficient choice. “Closest set” highlights a family that may need only one remaining entry. “Easiest missing” favors a more obtainable target when you want reliable progress. These suggestions are planning aids rather than guarantees, because availability and rates can change.

A practical routine is to choose one primary target and one fallback. Use the closest set as the primary goal, then keep an easier missing entry in mind when the preferred location or opportunity does not appear. Refresh the sorting snapshot after a session so newly collected items do not constantly rearrange the page while you are still reviewing results.

Understand details and mastery separately

The detail action opens the selected Sprite's planning summary, including ability, location guidance, variant bonus, and a listed summon cost when available. Treat location and rate information as a reference, not as a promise for a specific match. The data methodology explains how the site separates official information, direct checks, cross-references, and uncertain reports.

Collection and mastery are separate goals. Marking an item as owned records that it belongs in your collection. Marking it mastered records additional personal progress. If you remove ownership, the tool also clears mastery for that item so it cannot remain mastered while missing.

Back up progress before changing devices

Browser storage is convenient but it does not automatically follow you to another browser, profile, phone, or computer. Clearing site data can also remove the saved checklist. Before switching devices, copy the backup code from the tracker and store it somewhere you control. On the new device, paste the code into the import field and verify the collected total before discarding the old copy.

A backup code represents collection and mastery state. Anyone who receives it can recreate that state, although it does not include an account, email address, or payment information. Keep a recent code after a long collection session. If an import reports that the code is invalid, check that the complete code was copied without extra commentary or missing characters.

Share without overwriting your own checklist

A share link lets another person open the same progress state. When you open someone else's link, the tracker treats it as a shared checklist and does not replace the progress already stored in your browser. Save it to your tracker only when you deliberately want that shared state to become your own.

The missing-list and Discord summary actions are useful for text conversations. The exported image is better for a visual update. Review the result before posting: a link or image can reveal which entries you marked even though the site does not attach your real name. Avoid adding personal information to captions generated around the checklist.

Fix common checklist problems

Privacy choices do not block the tool

Necessary local storage supports the checklist itself. Optional analytics and advertising are controlled separately. Rejecting optional services does not stop tracking, filtering, backup, or sharing features. You can reopen Privacy choices later. The Privacy Policy describes each service and what remains on your device.

A repeatable after-match routine

  1. Open the released checklist and mark newly obtained entries.
  2. Switch to Missing only and review the closest incomplete family.
  3. Choose one next chase and one easier fallback.
  4. Copy a new backup code after a meaningful update.
  5. Share a list or image only after checking what it reveals.

This short routine keeps the tool accurate without turning every match into data entry. The checklist should reduce memory work and make the next decision clearer; it should not replace current in-game information or an official announcement when the game changes.