For team parents · coaches welcome too
Live score and shared photos for your kid's game
One link for your kid's game. Live score up top, photos underneath.
You pass the link to family and friends—they open it in the browser, no new app. Someone at the field can update the score; parents add pictures to one grid. It stays private to the people you invite, not a public feed or a league portal.
Private by default · You choose who sees each game you set up
What GameDay is
Each match gets its own page: score up top, photos below. You share a link or QR so grandparents and aunts get the same view—nothing to join, nothing to rank.
Simple scoreboard
Someone at the field taps to update the live score. Anyone with the link sees the same numbers—helpful when people trickle in late or compare memories after the game.
Shared gallery
Parents upload the shots they actually want to keep—one grid for the day instead of a dozen side threads and “forward this one.”
You stay in control
Not league software, not a social app—just that day's game, private until you share the link. You decide how wide the circle goes.
What you get
Built for the parents who live at the field on Saturdays—not for standings portals or another scroll-heavy timeline.
Check the score in one place
When someone walks up mid-game—"What's the score?"—or everyone compares notes after the whistle, there's a single live page to look at instead of three different guesses.
Photos that don't dissolve into the group chat
Where we focus most: one gallery for the day's pictures—easier than digging through texts, duplicates, and "who has the good shot?"
For team parents—not a feed, not league software
You share one match at a time with a link or QR. Coaches can help update the score, but you're not running standings, schedules, or a public social timeline.
Next step
Give your kid's next game one link for the score—and a gallery everyone can actually find.
Why we're building GameDay
We started this while shuttling kids to weekend games—niece- and nephew-age right now, but we want it to stay useful as they (and your teams) grow. Same simple idea: check the score, grab the photos, don't rebuild the whole season in a spreadsheet.
Down the road we'd like to tuck in plain-English notes for parents who are new to soccer—short sidelines tips so “what's happening out there?” feels a little less mysterious. That's on the wish list, not in the app yet.
One account. All the games you set up for your kids.
Add a match from your dashboard, share the link or QR, and everyone lands on the score first—then the photos—just like you do when you open the link yourself.