SIG Sauers Connect ecosystem combines a mobile application with compatible OHD paper targets to bring structured feedback into ordinary range trips. The premise is simple: pair the app on your phone with purpose-designed targets, shoot as you normally would, and then use the softwares tools to record what happened and why. Its aimed squarely at everyday shooters who want more than just holes in paperwithout buying a full-blown electronic target system. According to the review, the SIG Connect app is available for both Apple and Android phones, making adoption straightforward regardless of platform. The app is designed to work with OHD targets in a way that adds context to your hits. Rather than treating each string as a standalone event, Connect ties shots to drills, tallies performance, and helps compare sessions over time. The reviewer positions this as a bridge between casual range time and intentional practice, with the target/app pairing as the core workflow. Cost is a recurring theme. The OHD paper targets are described as costing about the same as other large paper targetsso theres no major buy-in beyond what many shooters already spend. On the software side, SIG offers an optional Premium membership priced at $79 per year. The review notes that Premium unlocks additional value inside the app, including saving sessions, accessing analytics, and adding game-style modes to keep practice engaging while still goal-oriented. The baseline experience remains approachable; the subscription is there to deepen the feature set for those who want extra structure. At the range is where the systems intent becomes clear. The reviewer highlights that the games inside the app arent gimmicks; theyre meant to introduce stress in measured doses so shooters can learn to deliver on-demand hits. That thememoving from static punching of paper to repeatable performance under mild pressureruns throughout the piece. The reviews framing suggests that a typical user can show up with their phone, staple up an OHD target, run a drill, and finish the session with more than a rough sense of how it went. Theyll have data: what drill, which strings, and how outcomes changed as fatigue or pressure increased. The analytics discussion is practical rather than technical. The review emphasizes saving sessions and tracking results over time, not esoteric metrics. Thats important because most shooters dont want another complicated gadgetthey want direct feedback that helps the next string be better than the last. The Connect/OHD pairing appears to aim for exactly that: simple inputs, useful outputs, repeatable practice. The reviewer also positions Connect as a way to make improvement fun. The games and structured drills keep attention focused and stave off the burn a box of ammo and go home rut that many range-goers fall into. With paper targets priced like other large formats and the optional Premium tier providing added session storage and analysis, the system tries to deliver a low-friction path to better training without forcing a switch to a different platform or expensive hardware. Nothing in the review suggests the app replaces fundamentals; rather, its a scaffold to help practice those fundamentals with purpose. The OHD targets keep your routine familiar; the phone adds the memory and structure. That combinationfamiliar targets with added feedbackappeals to shooters who want to see progress, not just groups.