Built by a shooter,
for shooters.
ShootLog is a digital shooting logbook that helps you track sessions, measure progress, and train with purpose — not guesswork.
The story
I'm a recreational pistol shooter and a software developer. After every range session I had the same problem: photos of targets in my camera roll, scores scribbled on paper, and no way to tell if I was actually improving.
I tried spreadsheets, note apps, even dedicated shooting apps — nothing stuck. They were either too complex, too ugly, or missing the one thing I cared about: am I getting better?
So I built ShootLog. One place for sessions, series, scores, grouping, and progress charts. Simple enough to use between drills at the range. Useful enough to show real trends over weeks and months.
What ShootLog does
Session logging
Record gun, distance, score, and notes in seconds.
Progress charts
See your average, trend, and personal bests over time.
MOA & grouping
Measure shot groups and convert to MOA automatically.
Dry fire training
Structured exercises with timer, reps, and history.
Badges & streaks
Earn achievements for real milestones — not just activity.
Target photos
Attach photos to each series. Build a visual archive.
Who it's for
- •Recreational shooters who want to track improvement
- •Competitive shooters preparing for matches (IPSC, IDPA, PPC)
- •Anyone doing dry fire training at home
- •Instructors who want students to log their practice
Current status
ShootLog is in public beta on iOS via TestFlight. Android is coming. The core features — session logging, progress charts, dry fire training, and MOA tracking — are live and used by real shooters every week.
This is an indie project — built, designed, and maintained by one person. Every feature request, bug report, and piece of feedback shapes what gets built next.
Try ShootLog — free beta
Join the beta on iOS TestFlight. Free, no credit card, no commitment.