POSEIDON
Fantasy · NFL
NFL · Chapter 3 · Intermediate

Scoring Systems Deep Dive

How fantasy football scoring rules quietly decide who wins your league — and why the same player can be a star in one format and a backup in another.

Updated May 25, 2026 10 minute read Cross-season data
2024 NFL · Ja'Marr Chase · Same season, four formats
He caught 127 passes. In one league he was a great receiver. In another league he was the overall #1 fantasy player. Same player. Same yards. Different rules.

This is what scoring rules do. They take the same on-field reality and turn it into wildly different fantasy outcomes. Understanding your league's specific format is one of the most underrated edges in the game.

SECTION 01

Why Scoring Matters More Than You Think

Most fantasy advice you read assumes a default scoring system — usually half-PPR. But your league might play standard. Or full PPR. Or TE Premium. Or six-point passing touchdowns. Each of these formats shifts which players are valuable and which strategies pay off.

Here's the simplest example. In 2024, Ja'Marr Chase caught 127 passes — the most of any wide receiver. In a Standard league, those catches scored him zero points on their own. In a Full PPR league, those same catches were worth 127 points. That single rule difference made him a 276-point player or a 403-point player. Same season. Same plays.

Now consider the opposite: a pure runner like Derrick Henry, who caught only 19 passes in 2024. His PPR/Standard gap is just 19 points across an entire season. The scoring format barely matters for him. The format choice changes who you should value and how much.

The first question every fantasy manager should ask: what scoring does my league use? The answer reshapes everything else.

FREE Set up your league's exact scoring once, see every player ranked your way
SECTION 02

The Standard Scoring Building Blocks

Every scoring system in fantasy football is a remix of the same building blocks. The standard versions, used by ESPN, Yahoo, and most home leagues:

These are the universals. Almost every league uses these exact values. What changes between formats is what gets added on top.

The Passing TD Question

The most common scoring variation is the value of a passing touchdown. Most leagues use 4 points. Some use 6 — the same value as a rushing or receiving TD. The difference is significant: at 4 points, QBs are competitive with skill positions but not dominant. At 6 points, QBs become the highest-scoring position by a wide margin, and the Late-Round QB strategy from Chapter 2 falls apart. You need an elite QB in 6-point leagues.

SECTION 03

The PPR Question

PPR — Point Per Reception — is the format change that most reshapes fantasy. Every catch a player makes is worth one additional point. So a 5-catch, 50-yard performance scores 5 points in Standard (just the yards) and 10 points in PPR. Doubled.

This rule rewards pass-catching usage. It changes the fundamental value of:

The middle ground is Half-PPR — 0.5 points per catch. It's the most common league setting in 2025, used by ESPN by default and growing as the consensus middle path. It rewards pass-catching meaningfully without making receivers completely dominant over rushers.

Use the widget below to see how the same player's totals change across all four major formats.

Same player, four scoring formats
Live · 2024 data

The "Δ" column shows how much each player gains moving from Standard to PPR. Pass-catchers get the biggest boost — Ja'Marr Chase and Christian McCaffrey both pick up 100+ points just from the format change. Pure rushers like Derrick Henry barely move.

FREE See this for any player from any season — pick your favorites
Watch your player's value shift across formats
Same 8 players. Four scoring formats. Click each format to see how the ranking re-shuffles. Notice how Sam LaPorta jumps 5+ spots in TE Premium — and how Saquon barely moves because volume rushing scores the same in any format.
SECTION 04

Custom Scoring — What Your League Actually Plays

Most leagues don't use the default scoring exactly. They customize a few rules to fit their preferences. Common variations:

The tuner below lets you adjust five common scoring rules and watch the rankings rearrange. The default starts at Half-PPR. Drag any slider and see who rises and falls.

Custom scoring tuner
Live · 2024 data

Drag the PPR slider up and watch Ja'Marr Chase climb. Move TE Premium to 1.5 and Brock Bowers rockets to elite. Bump passing TDs to 6 and the QBs sweep the top of the list. Your league's exact ruleset reshapes which players matter.

FREE Save your league's exact ruleset and apply it across all chapters
SECTION 05

How Scoring Should Influence Your Draft

If your league plays PPR, you draft differently than if it plays Standard. Obvious, right? But many managers don't actually adjust. They show up to a Standard league and take Ja'Marr Chase in round 1 anyway, when the relative value of his catches has dropped to zero.

The widget below shows the position-1 player's score in each of the four main scoring formats. Watch the bars stretch and contract as you mentally pick a format.

Position #1 across formats
Live · 2024 data

In Standard, RB1 (Saquon Barkley) and QB1 (Lamar Jackson) are closer in value than they appear in PPR. The introduction of catches as a scoring category mostly boosts WRs and pass-catching RBs while QBs and pure rushers stay near the same baseline.

The strategic takeaways:

We rank every player in your scoring.

POSEIDON reprojects every player across every common scoring format. Tell us your league's exact rules once, and every projection, every ranking, every Voice number adjusts to fit. We show our math. You decide what to do with it.

POSEIDON reprojects every ranking to your league's exact scoring · validated accuracy record publishes with the model
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