How to Play — MLB
One mystery roster. Three questions. Every day.
The basics
Restreak is a daily sports game. Each day, for every sport, you get the full roster and stat table for one mystery team-season — with the team name, season, and record hidden. Pick your sport from the tabs at the top (more sports on the way), and figure out all three:
- Team — pick the franchise from the dropdown. Eras matter, and the franchise's name of the day is the answer: the 1978 Buffalo Braves and today's Los Angeles Clippers are one franchise but two answers — same for the Hartford Whalers and the Carolina Hurricanes.
- Season — pick the season the roster is from.
- Record — pick whether the team's regular-season win total landed over or under the line.
Lock in all three answers, hit Submit, and see how you did. Everyone in the world gets the same rosters on the same day, and new ones arrive at midnight. You can play each sport once per day.
Scoring
- Each correct answer is worth 3 points.
- Get all three right and you earn a +1 bonus for a perfect 10.
- Close counts on the season. One season off on either side earns 2 points; two seasons off earns 1.
- Team and record are all or nothing. You name the franchise of the day and pick the right side of the over/under — or you don't.
Streaks and the leaderboard
Play on consecutive days to build a streak. Any sport counts — playing one game keeps your streak alive; you don't have to play them all. Miss a full day and it resets. With a free account (verified email), your scores, streaks, and question-by-question averages are saved forever, and you'll appear on the leaderboard. You can play without an account, but your results only live in your browser — and streaks reset.
MLB strategy
The same instincts work in every sport: the names are the clue — recognize one player and their career arc narrows the era fast. Sorting the table by the headline stat surfaces the stars. And missing stats are a time machine — a dash (—) means the stat wasn't tracked in that era. A few MLB-specific tells:
- Pitchers showing up in the Batters table mean the pre-DH era — before 1973 in the AL, before 2022 across both leagues.
- No saves (SV) for the relievers? Before 1969, when the save became an official stat. Sacrifice flies (and a few rate stats) only start in 1954.
- A games leader near 154 rather than 162 is a season before 1961-62; dead-ball-era rosters (pre-1920) show tiny home-run totals and a pile of triples.
Playing another sport? NBA rules · NFL rules · NHL rules.
House rules
- One play per sport, per day — no retries, no take-backs.
- The rosters roll over at midnight, your local time.
- No looking things up. (We can't stop you. But you'll know.)