Step 1
Start on Home
The Home page shows upcoming matches. Use it first when you want to find a spot before the match starts.
Learn
This app helps you scan table tennis matches faster. It shows upcoming matches, live scores, matchup history, saved favorites, and a few simple research pages.
Step 1
The Home page shows upcoming matches. Use it first when you want to find a spot before the match starts.
Step 2
Search player names, narrow by league, and use the ranking buttons so the board shows less noise.
Step 3
Tap a matchup when something looks interesting. The match page gives you the full history and deeper context.
Step 4
If you sign in, you can save matchups, use a chat username, and come back to your own list later.
Main areas
You do not need to use every page. Most people will live on Home, Match pages, and Live. The other pages help when you want to search, save, or double-check something.
This is the main page. It lists upcoming matches and helps you sort the slate by the strongest angles first.
Use this when matches are already being played. It shows live scores and keeps finished matches visible for a short time.
Chat is for talking with other users about the slate. Your account name and avatar show here if you set them up.
Calendar shows the full schedule by day. It is useful when you want to see what is coming later, not just the current board.
Sheets builds a quick custom list from the current board. Use simple filters to make a smaller slate you can scan faster.
Use lookup when you already know the two players you care about and want to jump straight to that matchup.
This lets you test simple same-match ideas against past meetings. It is for checking old results, not for making a promise about the next match.
Favorites is your saved list. It helps you keep track of the matchups you want to watch again.
Your account page is where you set a username, upload an avatar, and manage the personal side of the app.
Basic terms
How many past matches these two players have in the sample.
How often their past matches went above 74.5 total points.
The same over stat, but using the more recent meetings only.
The average total points scored in their past matches.
How often the match lasted at least four sets. More sets usually means more points.
How the recent sample is moving versus the full history at the line you are checking.
How much head-to-head history is actually behind the read. Bigger samples are usually more trustworthy.
Times are shown in your own timezone so you do not need to convert them yourself.
Keep it simple