Apr 10, 2026
Building Your Wall: Your Monster Collection, Visualized
Your BeastVault wall is a mosaic grid of every Monster variant you've ever logged. Here's what it shows and why collectors take it seriously.
Your wall is the most collector-facing part of BeastVault. It's a mosaic grid of every Monster Energy variant you've ever logged: every can that has made it into your collection. It grows every time you log a new can, and after a while it starts to tell a real story about where you've been and what you've found.
Two ways to look at it
The wall has two views. Unique variants shows you breadth: how many distinct Monster products you've ever logged, one image per variant. This is the view that measures the range of your collection. All occurrences shows you volume: every individual log, including multiple entries for the same variant. This is the view that reflects how actively you've been logging.
Most collectors are more interested in the unique variants view, since that number is the one people reference when they talk about their collection. A wall with 200+ unique variants means you've found 200+ distinct Monster products, which requires real effort in terms of tracking down regionals, imports, and limited editions.
What the grid looks like

The grid is zoomable. You can zoom out to see the whole thing at once, or zoom in to look at specific cans. The visual is a dense mosaic of can images, which is why it reads as a genuine collector artifact rather than just a number in your profile stats. There's something satisfying about watching it fill in over time.
How cans get added
A can appears on your wall the moment you log it. You don't have to do anything extra. If it's a variant you've never logged before, it shows up in your unique count. If you've logged it before, it adds to your all-occurrences count.
This means the wall grows naturally as you use the app. You don't curate it or manage it. You just log, and the wall builds itself.
Why it matters
The wall is what makes collection-tracking feel like collection-tracking rather than just a list in a spreadsheet. Seeing the actual can images laid out in a grid and watching it grow over time is meaningfully different from a number somewhere in your profile.
It's also what other users see when they visit your profile. A well-built wall communicates your history as a collector without you having to explain it. That's what the social feed runs on: people seeing each other's walls and activity and wanting to connect over it.