Practice is quiet. Games aren't.
Eight panels. One concept: train the moment, not just the motion.
The gap
Then the buzzer goes off, your teammate yells, the ref freezes the world, and the ball clangs off the rim. The shot didn't change. The pressure did.
You hear a ball, sneakers, your own breath. Your jumper is mechanical, repeatable, smooth.
2,000 people. A horn. Someone shouting "miss." A clock counting down inside your head.
Mount your phone, start your music, and the gym fills with the noise you'll actually shoot through.
What it is
The camera tracks your shooting motion. The audio engine layers six independent streams of chaos on top of your music. No accounts, no cloud — everything runs on the phone in your hand.
A procedural arena murmur that never repeats, sitting just under your music.
24-second loop running constantly. Silent until the last five seconds — then an urgent voice counts you down to zero.
iPhone Vision detects the leading edge of your shot motion 300-700ms before release. Trash talk lands right when you need it least.
Buzzers, air horns, refs, crowd cheers — randomized cadence that ramps over your session.
Spotify, Apple Music, anything — keeps playing underneath. No app pauses, no rerouting.
Slider sheet for every threshold. Crank the intimidation, tighten the shot trigger, all without leaving the floor.
How it works
There is no onboarding, no scenario picker, no account. You point the camera at yourself and you shoot.
Tripod or shelf. Portrait. 10-15 ft from your shooting spot, framing you knees-up.
Whatever app, whatever playlist. ClutchShot mixes on top — your music keeps playing.
Horn blast. Crowd settles in. By minute three the gym is hostile. By minute five it's a road game.
Join the beta
ClutchShot is in private TestFlight while we tune the detector against real shooters in real gyms. If you have an iPhone, a hoop, and 20 minutes a week to give us feedback, we'd love to send you an invite.