A theme this week

Some weeks have a clear thread running through them. This isn't one of them. The big new addition is small in size: a tiny chart on each round's card showing how you've been doing on it lately. Beyond that, a question about where the app should go next.

Recent form, right on the round card

Biggest addition

When you're picking a round to shoot, the round card now shows your last few scores on it. A row of little bars sat next to the word Recent, with your most recent score written out at the end. Eyeball the trend, see whether you've been creeping up or sliding back, decide if today's the day to push or to just enjoy yourself.

Portsmouth round card showing a row of small bars next to the word Recent, with the personal best bar picked out in gold and the most recent score 522 written out beside it

Portsmouth, with seven previous scores. The gold bar is the personal best, the number at the end (522) is the most recent.

The gold bar is your personal best on the round. When you see your other shoots clustering near it, you've been knocking on the door even if you haven't quite kicked it down. If your most recent bar is the tallest of the lot, well, you've already noticed without me having to tell you.

You need at least three previous shoots on a round before the sparkline shows up. Two scores don't tell a story. Three is the smallest number that hints at one. Rounds you've barely shot will keep the card uncluttered until there's something worth saying.

The information was already there before this week. You'd just have had to open history, filter to the round, and read down the table. Same information, no taps.

What's next

Picking up a thread that's come up a few times: an arrow-count goal with a streak counter. Set yourself a daily or weekly target (say, 100 arrows a day), and the home screen tracks your progress and how many days in a row you've hit it. Olympic recurve archers in particular care about volume, and other apps have shown there's an appetite for it. If that sounds like something you'd use, or you've got strong opinions about how it should work, tell me on Facebook so I can shape it around what testers actually want rather than what I'm guessing they want.

The Google Play production-access blocker hasn't moved. Same ask as last week: Google wants more people using the app through the test track before they'll let it onto the store proper. If you'd like to help, send me the Google account email address you'd use on the Play Store and I'll add you. A Facebook message is the easiest way to get it to me. Thanks to everyone testing.