Rattletrap parses and generates Rocket League replays. Parsing replays can be used to analyze data in order to collect high-level statistics like players and points, or low-level details like positions and cameras. Generating replays can be used to modify replays in order to force everyone into the same car or change the map a game was played on.
Rattletrap supports every version of Rocket League up to 2.45, which was released on 2024-10-22. If a replay can be played by the Rocket League client, it can be parsed by Rattletrap. (If not, that's a bug. Please report it!)
Rattletrap is a command-line application. You should only use it if you're comfortable running things in terminals or command prompts. Otherwise consider using another tool like Ball Chasing.
The best way to get Rattletrap is by downloading the latest release for your platform.
Rattletrap is written in [Haskell][]. If you'd like to use a program written in a different language, consider one of the following:
- https://github.com/jjbott/RocketLeagueReplayParser (C#)
- https://github.com/nickbabcock/rrrocket (Rust)
- https://github.com/Bakkes/CPPRP (C++)
Rocket League saves your replays in a folder that depends on your operating system.
- Windows:
%UserProfile%/Documents/My Games/Rocket League/TAGame/Demos
- For example:
C:/Users/Taylor/Documents/My Games/Rocket League/TAGame/Demos
- macOS:
$HOME/Library/Application Support/Rocket League/TAGame/Demos
- For example:
/Users/taylor/Library/Application Support/Rocket League/TAGame/Demos
- Linux:
$HOME/.local/share/Rocket League/TAGame/Demos
- For example:
/home/taylor/.local/share/Rocket League/TAGame/Demos
Rattletrap is a command line application.
$ rattletrap --help
rattletrap version 12.0.0
-c --compact minify JSON output
-f --fast only encode or decode the header
-h --help show the help
-i FILE|URL --input=FILE|URL input file or URL
-m MODE --mode=MODE decode or encode
-o FILE --output=FILE output file
--schema output the schema
--skip-crc skip the CRC
-v --version show the version
By default Rattletrap will try to determine the appropriate mode (either decode
or encode) based on the file extensions of the input or output. You can
override this behavior by passing --mode
(or -m
) with either decode
or
encode
.
Input extension | Output extension | Mode |
---|---|---|
.replay |
anything | decode (parse) |
.json |
anything | encode (generate) |
anything | .replay |
encode (generate) |
anything | .json |
decode (parse) |
anything | anything | decode (parse) |
Rattletrap can parse (decode) Rocket League replays and output them as JSON.
$ rattletrap --input http://example.com/input.replay --output output.json
# or
$ rattletrap -i input.replay -o output.json
# or
$ rattletrap < input.replay > output.json
The input argument can either be a local path or a URL.
By default the JSON is pretty-printed. To minify the JSON, pass --compact
(or
-c
) to Rattletrap. Even when the JSON is minified, it's extremely large. The
output can be up to 100 times larger than the input. For example, a 1.5 MB
replay turns into 31 MB of minified JSON or 159 MB of pretty-printed JSON.
Rattletrap can also generate (encode) Rocket League replays from JSON files.
$ rattletrap --input http://example.com/input.json --output output.replay
# or
$ rattletrap -i input.json -o output.replay
# or
$ rattletrap --mode encode < input.json > output.replay
The input argument can either be a local path or a URL.
If the JSON was generated by Rattletrap, the output replay will be bit-for-bit identical to the input replay.
By inserting another program between parsing and generating, Rattletrap can be used to modify replays.
$ rattletrap -i input.replay |
modify-replay-json |
rattletrap -o output.replay