One of the questions darts fans love to debate is simple:
Who really is the best player in the world?
The official PDC Order of Merit says one thing. Independent rating systems often say something slightly different. At Q4QS, I've developed my own performance-based ranking system, and I thought it would be interesting to see how the four different approaches compare.
For this comparison I've looked at:
- PDC Order of Merit (two-year money list)
- PDC 2026 Calendar Year Order of Merit
- Darts Orakel Ratings
- Q4QS Rankings
I'm not trying to prove one system is right and another is wrong. In reality, they all measure something slightly different.
The PDC Order of Merit measures prize money over two years.
The calendar-year Order of Merit tells us who has earned the most during 2026.
Orakel uses a sophisticated rating system based on player strength and results.
Q4QS is built around current match performance against quality opposition, rewarding consistency rather than prize money alone.
That's why comparing them is so fascinating.
The Top Is Surprisingly Stable
Perhaps the biggest takeaway is that the elite players remain elite whichever ranking you choose.
Luke Littler and Luke Humphries occupy the top two places in every system, simply swapping positions depending on the methodology.
Gerwyn Price also remains firmly inside every top four despite not sitting second on any individual list.
When completely different ranking systems all point towards the same handful of players, it's a good indication that those players genuinely belong among the world's elite.
Wessel Nijman Is Knocking On The Door
If one player stands out more than anyone else, it's Wessel Nijman.
His official PDC Order of Merit position still sits outside the very top names, but every performance-based system clearly believes he's already among the elite.
- PDC Order of Merit: 14th
- 2026 Order of Merit: 2nd
- Orakel: 3rd
- Q4QS: 4th
That suggests his results over the last few months have been exceptional, even if his two-year prize money hasn't quite caught up yet.
Form Versus History
The calendar-year Order of Merit produces some fascinating movements.
Kevin Doets jumps into the top ten.
Ross Smith climbs as high as third.
Luke Woodhouse also reaches the top ten.
Meanwhile, established stars such as Michael van Gerwen fall outside the top fifteen despite remaining inside the world's elite overall.
That doesn't necessarily mean they're playing poorly.
It simply shows how powerful recent form can be when you remove the previous year's prize money from the equation.
Where Q4QS Differs
One thing that immediately stands out is how closely Q4QS and Orakel agree.
Players such as:
- Wessel Nijman
- Kevin Doets
- Luke Woodhouse
- Ross Smith
- Rob Cross
all appear in very similar positions.
That isn't by design. The two systems use different methods, but both are trying to answer a similar question:
How well is this player actually performing right now?
By contrast, the official Order of Merit has to reward tournament success because that's exactly what it was designed to do.
Winning major titles should carry enormous weight—and it does.
The Players That Divide Opinion
Every ranking has a few names that generate debate.
Q4QS places Sebastian Bialecki inside the world's top ten, reflecting outstanding performances across a huge number of matches.
Similarly, players such as Cristo Reyes, Jeffrey De Graaf and Derek Coulson all rate considerably higher than they do on the official Order of Merit.
On the other hand, Gian van Veen sits third on the official Order of Merit but only 21st on the current Q4QS rankings.
That doesn't mean either ranking is incorrect.
It simply reflects the different questions being asked.
One measures prize money.
The other measures sustained match performance.
Does Prize Money Always Equal Ranking Strength?
Perhaps the biggest discussion point is whether prize money always reflects who is currently playing the best darts.
Players compete in different numbers of Players Championship events.
Some players qualify for more televised tournaments.
Major championships carry vastly more prize money than floor events.
All of those factors influence the official rankings—and rightly so, because that's exactly how the PDC system is intended to work.
Performance ratings such as Q4QS and Orakel remove much of that financial weighting and instead focus more heavily on how players actually perform whenever they step on stage or to the oche.
There Isn't One Perfect Ranking
After comparing all four systems, one thing becomes clear.
There probably isn't a single "correct" ranking.
The official Order of Merit tells us who has earned the most.
The calendar-year ranking tells us who is hottest right now.
Orakel measures playing strength.
Q4QS measures sustained performance against opposition.
Each offers a different lens through which to view the professional game.
Perhaps the best way to judge a player isn't by looking at just one ranking—but by seeing where they consistently appear across them all.
When every ranking agrees, you've probably found a genuine world-class player.
When they disagree, that's where the debate really begins.