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Saque

Saque is an Apple Watch scorekeeper for tennis, pickleball, table tennis, and badminton. Track matches from your wrist or phone.

Saque

What is Saque?

Saque is an Apple Watch scorekeeping app for racket sports. It is designed for tennis, pickleball, table tennis, and badminton, letting players track points from the wrist while keeping the phone out of the way.

The app handles sport-specific scoring formats, mirrors match information to the phone, and creates a short written recap after a match. It also includes weekly summaries, shareable match cards, and support for both Apple Watch and phone-only use.

Key Features

  • Four racket sports in one app: Saque supports tennis, pickleball, table tennis, and badminton, with scoring rules tailored to each sport.
  • Apple Watch scoring controls: Users can score matches with the Digital Crown, a Double Tap, or tap-to-score controls, which keeps the phone off court.
  • Sport-specific rule handling: The app supports formats such as tennis sets, deuce, tiebreaks, pickleball rally-to-11 and side-out, table tennis to 11, and badminton to 21.
  • Match recaps and weekly summaries: Saque writes a short sentence after a match and provides a Sunday digest with podium-style weekly highlights.
  • Private, on-device workflow: The app says it works offline, keeps data on the device, and does not require an account or server sync.
  • Match sharing and records: Finished matches can be shared by QR, with personal bests, records, and shareable celebration cards available for posting.
  • Watch and iPhone companion features: The product lists widgets, Watch complications, a Live Activity, heart-rate tracking, swing detection, and time-in-zone metrics.

How to Use Saque

Install Saque on an iPhone and, if available, on an Apple Watch. Start a match, choose the sport, and score points from the wrist using the supported Watch controls or the phone-only interface.

During play, the app tracks the score and match context. After the match, Saque generates a brief recap, stores the result on the device, and can surface weekly summaries and shareable match cards.

Use Cases

  • Casual club matches: A player can track tennis, pickleball, table tennis, or badminton games without manually writing down scores.
  • Doubles play: Saque supports doubles and includes partner tracking, which is useful for recurring playing groups.
  • Match review and memory keeping: Players who want more than a final score can use the written recap and weekly digest to remember how a match unfolded.
  • Phone-free court sessions: Users who prefer to keep their phone in a bag can score from the Apple Watch while staying focused on the rally.
  • Sharing results with friends: Finished matches can be shared via QR and celebration cards, which works for informal posting or keeping a visible match record.

FAQ

  • Do I need an Apple Watch? No. The site says Saque works phone-only with a tap-to-score interface, although it is built around the Apple Watch experience.
  • Which sports does it support? Tennis, pickleball, table tennis, and badminton.
  • Does it require an account or internet connection? The site says it is private by default, with no account and no servers, and that it works offline.
  • What platforms are supported? The page lists iPhone 11 or newer with iOS 26.1 or later, and Apple Watch Series 6 or newer with watchOS 26.1 or later.
  • How is it priced? The site says Saque is a one-time purchase of ₱299, with no subscription.

Alternatives

  • Manual scorekeeping apps: These typically focus on recording points and sets, but may not include Apple Watch controls or sport-specific rule handling.
  • General sports tracking apps: Broader fitness or activity apps can log movement and sessions, but usually do not manage live racket-sport scoring.
  • Paper scorecards or notes: Simple and offline, but they do not provide automatic recaps, weekly summaries, or shareable match cards.
  • Native scoreboard timers or club tools: Useful for basic match management, but generally less personal and less focused on private, on-device match history.