Video Games

The Ultimate Ranking of Every Call of Duty Game by Multiplayer 

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Long before digital pre-loads and massive day-one gigabyte updates, “launch day” was a sacred ritual. Picture this: It’s 11:30 PM on a brisk Monday night in early November. You’re shivering in a canvas folding chair on the sidewalk outside GameStop, fueled entirely by Cool Ranch Doritos and an ungodly amount of Mountain Dew. You’re passionately arguing with a total stranger about whether Stopping Power is a crutch perk, counting down the agonizing seconds until midnight so you can sprint home, pop that freshly unwrapped disc into your console, and hear that iconic multiplayer menu music.

That was the golden era of gaming. Over the last two decades, this franchise has defined first-person shooters, fueled intense rivalries, and given us some of the most legendary maps in gaming history. But let’s be honest—not all CoD games are created equal.

Today, we are ranking every mainline Call of Duty game since it first came out, based strictly on the multiplayer experience. We aren’t looking at campaigns, and we are leaving Zombies for another day. We are grading these games on map design, weapon balance, create-a-class systems, and pure, unadulterated, trash-talking PvP lobby energy.

Grab your headsets, camp in a corner, mute that one guy blasting music through his mic, and let’s dive into the definitive Call of Duty multiplayer tier list!

22 Call of Duty: Vanguard (2021)

Call of Duty Van Guard video game poster with various soldiers in a war scene.

Vanguard tried to take us back to WWII again, but the multiplayer felt chaotic in all the wrong ways. The weapon balance was a mess with 10 attachment slots, and the pacing mechanics split the player base.

  • Favorite Map: Das Haus

21 Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare (2016)

Call of Duty Infinite Warfare video game poster with a soldier wearing a helmet and carrying a weapon.

By 2016, the jetpack fatigue was real. While it had its defenders, the multiplayer was essentially a watered-down version of Black Ops III. It just couldn’t capture the magic of boots-on-the-ground warfare.

  • Favorite Map: Precinct

20 Call of Duty 3 (2006)

Call of Duty 3 video game poster with soldiers in a war scene.

Developed in a massive rush, CoD 3 was janky. It introduced vehicles to multiplayer, which was ambitious but ultimately felt out of place for an arcade shooter.

  • Favorite Map: Eder Dam

19 Call of Duty: Ghosts (2013)

Call of duty Ghosts video game poster with a solder wearing a balaclava.

The TTK (Time to Kill) was so fast you evaporated if someone just looked at you. The massive maps encouraged hiding in corners with an M27-IAR thermal scope. I think most can agree that this was one of the worst in the franchise.

  • Favorite Map: Strikezone

18 Call of Duty: Modern Warfare III (2023)

Call of Duty Modern Warfare 3 video game poster featuring three soldiers on a red background.

While it brought back the beloved 2009 MW2 maps, it felt more like a $70 DLC than a standalone revolution. The nostalgia carried it, but the skill-based matchmaking was dialed to eleven.

  • Favorite Map: Terminal (Remastered)

17 Call of Duty (2003)

Call of Duty 2003 video game poster featuring soldiers in a war scene.

The one that started it all on PC! It revolutionized the genre but hadn’t quite found the signature CoD multiplayer formula yet. It was slower, tactical, and a legend in its own right.

  • Favorite Map: Carentan

16 Call of Duty 2 (2005)

Call of Duty 2 video game poster featuring soldiers in a war scene.

This game launched the Xbox 360 era. The multiplayer was simple, map design was excellent, and the bolt-action rifle battles were incredibly satisfying.

  • Favorite Map: Toujane

15 Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare (2014)

Call of Duty Advanced Warfare video game poster featuring a soldier with an exoskeleton strapped to his back.

“Press F to pay respects,” but also press A twice to boost jump. AW changed the franchise forever with exo-suits. It was a polarizing, hyper-fast sweatfest, but undeniably fun if you mastered the movement.

  • Favorite Map: Solar

14 Call of Duty: WWII (2017)

Call of Duty World War 2 video game poster featuring a close up of a white soldier wearing a helmet.

A return to boots-on-the-ground after three years of jetpacks. Once Sledgehammer overhauled the restrictive division system halfway through the year, the multiplayer actually became quite great.

  • Favorite Map: London Docks

13 Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II (2022)

Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2 2022 video game poster featuring a solider on a dark background.

Great graphics, phenomenal gunplay, but questionable design choices. The removal of slide-canceling and traditional mini-map red dots slowed the game down to a crawl.

  • Favorite Map: Mercado Las Almas

12 Call of Duty: Black Ops 4 (2018)

Call of Duty Black Ops 4 video game poster featuring a soldier with a mohawk and tattoos on his head.

Manual healing and operator abilities turned this into a hero-shooter hybrid. The TTK was massive, rewarding team shots and accuracy, but specialists like Prophet were infuriating.

  • Favorite Map: Arsenal

11 Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War (2020)

Call of Duty Black Ops Cold War video game poster featuring a split image of two different soldiers.

This felt like a love letter to the golden era. It had a traditional prestige feel, excellent map design, and an incredibly satisfying arcade pacing.

  • Favorite Map: Moscow

10 Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 (2025)

Black Ops 3 video game poster featuring various game characters.

Jumping ahead to the 2030s, BO7 delivered an awesome evolution of the omnimovement system. It struck a great balance between near-future tech and classic gunfights.

  • Favorite Map: Standoff 2035 (Remaster)

9 Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 (2024)

Call of Duty Black Ops 6 video game poster featuring a shadowy soldier on a dark background.

Set in the ’90s Gulf War, BO6 introduced the revolutionary “omnimovement,” letting you dive and slide in any direction like an action movie star. It was a massive shot of adrenaline for the franchise.

  • Favorite Map: Scud

8 Call of Duty: Modern Warfare (2019)

Call of Dury Modern Warfare video game poster featuring a white soldier with a beard and mustache.

This game rebooted the franchise’s engine. The gunsmith was revolutionary, the animations were unmatched, and it birthed Warzone. While maps like Piccadilly haunt our dreams, the raw gunplay is legendary.

  • Favorite Map: Shoot House

7 Call of Duty: Black Ops III (2015)

Call of duty Black Ops 3 video game poster featuring a soldier holding two weapons.

The pinnacle of the advanced movement era. The wall-running felt buttery smooth, the weapon sandbox was incredibly diverse, and the vibrant, colorful maps were a joy to play on.

  • Favorite Map: Combine

6 Call of Duty: World at War (2008)

Call of duty World at War poster featuring a solder in a jungle.

Dark, gritty, and raw. WaW took the MW engine and dropped it into a brutal WWII setting. The MP40 with a drum mag remains one of the most delightfully overpowered weapons in gaming history.

5 Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 (2011)

Call of Duty Modern Warfare 3 2011 game poster, featuring a soldier on a white background.

MW3 perfected what MW2 started. It introduced the Specialist strike package, allowing you to become a one-man army if you went on a streak. The infected game mode alone provided hundreds of hours of laughs.

  • Favorite Map: Dome

4 Call of Duty: Black Ops (2010)

Call of Duty Black Ops poster with a shadowy dark figure of a soldier.

COD points, wager matches, the Famas, and the introduction of Nuketown. Black Ops had an unmistakable aesthetic and gave us some of the most iconic maps and weapons of all time. Sticks and Stones with your friends at 2 AM? Peak gaming.

  • Favorite Map: Nuketown

3 Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare (2007)

Call of duty 4 Modern Warfare poster with a solder in green camouflage flanked by two helicopters.

The grandfather of modern shooters. Create-a-class, killstreaks, and progression systems didn’t really exist like this before CoD 4. It revolutionized the FPS landscape and still holds up brilliantly today.

  • Favorite Map: Crash

2 Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 (2009)

Call of duty Modern Warfare 2 poster with a solider dressed in green camouflage.

If you survived MW2 lobbies, you can survive anything. Everything in this game was overpowered, which ironically made it perfectly balanced. From dual-wield Model 1887s to cross-map throwing knives and tactical nukes, MW2 was absolute, unbridled lightning in a bottle.

  • Favorite Map: Rust

1 Call of Duty: Black Ops II (2012)

Call of duty black ops 2 poster with a shadowy figure in the dark background.

Here it is. The undisputed king of Call of Duty multiplayer. Black Ops II was perfection. It introduced the “Pick 10” create-a-class system, completely reinventing how we built loadouts. League Play legitimized competitive CoD, weapon camos (Diamond!) actually meant something, and the map flow was a masterclass in 3-lane design.

Whether you were running an AN-94, quickscoping with the DSR 50, or dropping swarms on the enemy team, BO2 never had a dull moment. It was the absolute peak of camping outside GameStop, rushing home, and hopping into a party chat with the squad.

  • Favorite Map: Raid

Whether you agree that Black Ops II wears the undisputed crown, or you’re a die-hard Modern Warfare 2 purist ready to 1v1 us on Rust over this list, there’s one thing we can all agree on: the golden era of Call of Duty multiplayer was something incredibly special. It wasn’t just about grinding for K/D ratios or showing off prestige emblems; it was about the late nights with the squad, the chaotic open-mic lobbies, and the shared cultural experience of midnight launches. The franchise continues to evolve, but those memories of racing home from GameStop to drop into your very first match will live on forever. Do you agree with our rankings, or did we completely disrespect your favorite? Let us know your top three down in the comments, and keep it locked to DorkDesk for more gaming nostalgia. Stay frosty!

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Kato Leonard is a DorkDesk staff member who continues to invent new ways to fulfill his creative passions. Most known as the “MySpace Guy” or “Kato3000”, Kato has been building and running websites since he was 14-years-old with the most notable website…

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