Shoot 360, a leader in technology-driven basketball training, has partnered with Ballislife to launch the Shoot 360 x Ballislife League, billed as the first global, multiplayer skill-based basketball shooting competition. Announced in Vancouver, Washington, the league begins play on October 8, 2025, and blends online and in-facility participation for players of all levels. The competition features a $20,000 prize pool, standardized formats, and appearances from notable NBA professionals and NIL athletes. The leagues four-quarter game format emphasizes pure shooting performance rather than traditional five-on-five play. There are no referees and no defenseonly standardized shot maps and sequences designed to isolate shooting as the decisive skill. Each attempt is measured by Shoot 360s proprietary technology, which quantifies arc, depth, accuracy, and made shots. These data points feed directly into live scoreboards and national leaderboards, allowing individual players and three-person teams to benchmark themselves locally and nationwide in real time. Registration opens to players aged 14 and older, who can form teams of three through the Shoot 360 app or the official website and compete at participating Shoot 360 locations. The inaugural season spans six weeks: five weeks of regular play followed by a one-week playoff phase. Each matchup lasts 60 minutes and is scheduled weekly at each teams local center. Top performers advance to a postseason phase scheduled for November 12, 2025, where champions will be crowned based on cumulative, standardized shooting metrics rather than conventional game outcomes. Prizes are structured to reward excellence across multiple tiers. The first-place team earns $10,000, second place $3,000, and third place $2,000. Additional awards include $1,000 for the Most Valuable Shooter and $1,000 each for champions in tiers two through five. Beyond cash, competitors may receive one-of-one Ballislife gear, highlights across Ballislifes prominent media channels, featured placement on Shoot 360s national leaderboards, and coverage by local centers highlighting top weekly performances. League Commissioner Bryce White explained the vision: by removing running, officiating, and defense, the format isolates shooting as a skill that can be measured objectively and compared fairly across locations. The collaboration with Ballislife expands visibility; its established media footprint brings broader cultural reach, connecting local shooters to a global audience. The league will also host appearances from former NBA players such as Fred Jones, Zaza Pachulia, and Craig Hodges, offering participants a chance to test their skills alongside experienced professionals. Shoot 360 President Craig Moody described the league as the natural next step for a platform built around measurable training and connected competition. With standardized shot sequences and machine-vision scoring, a high school player in Minneapolis can stack up against a pro in Los Angeles without travel. Ballislife CEO Matt Rodriguez said the partnership showcases the skill that increasingly defines modern basketballshootingwhile encouraging players to step out from behind their phones and compete in quantifiable environments.