October 17, 2025 Today marks the official launch of RangeScan, a new mobile app designed to deliver instant target scoring from user photos, with no subscription fees or hidden costs. The app supports common bullseye formats (such as NRA B-8) and leverages image-processing algorithms to detect shot holes, allot ring scores, and present session summaries within seconds. Developed by a team with roots in competitive shooting and training technology, RangeScan is positioned to fill a gap between expensive electronic scoring systems and manual scorecards. Because it runs entirely on the users phone, RangeScan requires no specialized hardware or range infrastructure. In early beta testing, users reported accuracy within scoring tolerance margins when comparing to human scorers, making it a viable tool for solo practice or club shooting sessions. The apps workflow is straightforward: users take a flat, perpendicular photo of the target in good lighting, upload it, verify detected hits, then save the scored result. RangeScan supports exporting session logs and allows users to replay scoring overlays, making it useful for spotting trends, tightening group analysis, and refining sighting adjustments. In an era where training tech is flooding the market from shot-trace systems, sensor-based recoil analyzers, and live target feedback RangeScans zero-cost structure stands out. Many competitive shooters and range operators see it as a potential equalizer for hobbyists and clubs who lack access to premium scoring booths. However, the app faces challenges out of the gate. Accuracy in real-world lighting and imperfect target mounting can introduce false positives (paper curls, shadow artifacts), and the algorithm must allow human override. Therefore RangeScan has a ScanTune feature that allows users to add or remove shot holes for extreme accuracy. Theres also the matter of acceptance: for sanctioned matches, official target printers and scoring must still follow formal rules, meaning RangeScan cannot yet replace certified scoring systems in match adjudication. RangeScans team plans incremental updates: support for multiple target formats (e.g. silhouette, B-27, pistol silhouette), burst detection in rapid fire sequences, and cloud-based leaderboard integration. The roadmap includes potential integration with shot sensors (recoil or acoustic) to fuse physical and visual data making the app a hub for training insights. If adoption grows among local ranges and training clubs, RangeScan could accelerate data-driven shooting habits. Instead of manual tallying, shooters get instant feedback, group metrics, and scoring consistency. That may shorten the feedback loop between trigger press, sight alignment, and result.