Edge starts before the first hand.
Good players study ranges and sizing. Great ones also study the room. Table Scout gives you the public record on the names you're about to play, so your edge starts at the seat draw, not on the river.
Lineup map
Lay out the table by seat, threat level, and known public history, so you can see where the pressure is coming from before the first hand.
Player file
Pull the context that matters: public results, event history, chip counts, venue patterns, and player history, framed for the decision, not as a trivia dump.
Practical counters
Turn research into adjustments: who to avoid, who to isolate, and where the table is likely soft.
Built for the seat-draw moment.
You see the table. You recognize two names. One stack is applying pressure. Table Scout is built for that exact window: get the public context fast, then play poker instead of burning twenty minutes digging through tabs.
Pre-session
Scout a player list before you drive to the room or register for a live event.
At the table
Get a quick public read when a new player sits, a table breaks, or a name looks familiar, within venue rules.
Post-session
Send the weird hands to Sharp, and track whether better prep is showing up in your results with Ledger.
What Table Scout is built around.
The promise is simple: fewer unknowns before important pots. Public-data research, packaged for poker decisions. Nothing private, nothing against the rules.
Public sources only
Tournament results, event history, chip counts, venue patterns, and other publicly available poker information. No private or restricted data. No unauthorized access.
Decision framing
Not a data dump. The output answers the only two questions that matter at the table: how dangerous is this player, and what should I watch for?
Part of the loop
Prepare with Table Scout, sharpen the hands with Sharp, and measure the edge over time with Ledger.
Table Scout FAQ.
What does Table Scout show me about a player?
Table Scout summarizes publicly available poker information like tournament results, event history, chip counts, and venue patterns, then turns it into a practical read: how experienced the player is, where they have shown up before, and what you should pay attention to at the table.
How do I look up a poker player with Table Scout?
Give it a name or a player list. Table Scout organizes publicly available poker information, including tournament results, event history, chip counts, and venue patterns, and frames it as a practical read: how dangerous the player is, and what to watch for.
Does Table Scout use private data?
No. Table Scout is built around publicly available poker information and player context. It is designed for preparation, not private data access.
When should I use it?
Before you register, when you get a seat draw, when a new player sits down, or when one name at the table is worth a closer look. Use it for prep, within venue rules.
Is using Table Scout against the rules?
Table Scout is research on publicly available information, done as preparation. Always follow the rules of your venue or event regarding device use at the table.
Stop playing mystery lineups.
You still have to make the decisions. Table Scout just makes sure you're not making them blind.