Pickup games, sorted

Fair teams.
Zero drama.

RosterIQ plans the session, counts the squad and splits teams that are actually fair — so the group chat can go back to talking about the game.

Download on theApp Store Android — warming up on the bench

What it does

Everything between
“who’s in?” and kickoff.

01

Sessions that run themselves

Kickoff time, pitch, player cap and the weather — all on one card. Your squad taps once to say “I’m in.”

02

No more schoolyard picks

One tap splits the roster into teams with even skill totals. A balance bar shows the gap — shuffle until it’s deadlock.

03

Settle it after the whistle

Rate your mates when the match ends. Skill scores update quietly, so next week’s split is even fairer.

04

Trash talk, contained

Every session gets its own chat. Lineups, logistics and banter stay out of the family group.

How it works

From group chat to kickoff in three taps.

1.

Create the session

Pick the sport, kickoff time, pitch and player cap. Takes less time than tying your boots.

2.

The squad checks in

Invites go out, RSVPs roll in. The card shows confirmed players, the cap and the forecast.

3.

Tap. Teams. Play.

RosterIQ splits the roster by skill rating. Argue about the score instead.

1 tap
From roster to balanced teams
0
Spreadsheets, polls or paper lists
Rematches until it’s settled

Questions from the bench

Before you ask the group chat.

Is RosterIQ free?

Yes — free to download and free to organize. Get the squad in, set the session, play. No card required to pick teams.

How does team balancing work?

Every player carries a skill rating built from post-match votes. When you tap “make teams,” RosterIQ splits the roster so the skill totals come out as even as possible — and shows you the gap so you can shuffle or swap until everyone stops complaining.

Which sports does it support?

Football, basketball, volleyball, handball and anything else you play in teams. If your group argues about who plays with whom, RosterIQ can referee it.

Does it work without an account?

Yes. “Continue without an account” runs local games entirely on your device — pitch-side dead zones included. An account adds friends, chat, and cross-device sync.

When is Android coming?

It’s doing warm-up laps. iOS is first out of the tunnel; Android follows. Watch this page for the whistle.