But for all the medals, there were all the near-misses.
In total, there were five fourth-place finishes, some of which were by the most narrow of margins.
Take freestyle skier Kirsty Muir, for example. Just 0.41 of a point was the difference between bronze and fourth place in the slopestyle.
Had she not squatted on a landing on her final run, she would have made the podium.
Agonisingly, she then recorded another fourth in the big air.
Snowboarder Mia Brookes, meanwhile, knew she needed to go huge on her final big air run for a chance of a medal – and so she did.
She landed a competition-first backside 1620 trick – featuring four-and-a-half rotations – but over-rotated at the very last moment.
Had she landed it cleanly, she would have won a medal.
“Fourths make champions,” GB Snowsport chief executive Vicky Gosling told BBC Sport.
“We are fourth in the world. Kirsty’s from Aberdeen, she started on the dry slopes. Mia started on the dry slopes in Manchester and then look where they’ve got to. We should be utterly proud of what we’ve achieved here.”
Around the Games, there were plenty of other performances that may not have brought home a medal, but were record-breaking in their own right.
In cross-country skiing, Andrew Musgrave and James Clugnet recorded a fifth-place finish in the team sprint event, the nation’s best Olympic result in the sport.
That bettered Musgrave’s sixth in the 10km interval start freestyle, while Anna Pryce recorded a best British women’s result at an Olympics with her 32nd place in the sprint classic.
Stoecker, Freya Tarbit and Amelia Coltman all finished in the top 10 of the women’s skeleton, while there were more than 20 top-10 finishes in total.
“I think because of the depth and breadth across so many sports and disciplines, it shows that we are not a one-trick pony,” said UK Sport’s director of performance Kate Baker.
“We’re mixing it with the very best in winter sport. I think we can be really excited about what we’ve achieved.”