Total PPR fantasy points is the final scoreboard for any fantasy league that scored one point per reception. Unlike points per game, this leaderboard rewards availability — players who played all 17 games and stayed healthy finish higher than players with superior per-game production but missed time. That availability premium is enormous in season-long formats, where missing three or four games can drop an RB1 to fringe-starter territory regardless of how well he played when he was on the field.
Full PPR scoring favors pass-catching running backs and slot receivers more than any other format. A three-down back who catches 60 passes earns an extra 60 points over the season in PPR versus standard scoring, which can push him two or three tiers higher in the overall rankings. Slot receivers with high target share but modest yardage climb the PPR leaderboard in the same way. If your league is full PPR, this is the single most important leaderboard to study when planning your draft.
This list is built from half-PPR production with a reception bonus applied, so totals reflect what a player would have earned under full PPR scoring rules. Compare it directly to the standard scoring leaderboard to see how much your league format shifts the rankings at each position. The wider the gap between a player's PPR rank and standard rank, the more format-dependent his fantasy value is, and the more you need to know your league's scoring before drafting him.