Football app feature list
Tribuna.com outlined 15 features redefining football apps, from AI match predictions to live‑table projections and lineup visualisations that package analytics for fans. (natlawreview.com) Those product features emphasise delivering digestible projections and explainers rather than raw model outputs. (natlawreview.com)
Football apps are shifting from live scores to built-in explainers, as Tribuna.com this week published a 15-feature blueprint centered on predictions, projected tables and lineup visuals ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. (einnews.com) The April 13 release said Tribuna’s match model analyzes team form, squad statistics, historical results and other indicators before each game, and said its recent internal accuracy rate has exceeded 83 percent. (einnews.com) Tribuna paired those forecasts with features that translate numbers into fan-facing visuals: live table projections that recalculate standings during matches, projected lineups, player role maps and automated pre-match notes inside a match hub. (tribuna.com) The pitch is not raw analytics for professional scouts. Tribuna’s own materials describe a product that bundles odds comparisons, head-to-head records, key-player tags and explainers into one screen for supporters and bettors following big tournaments. (tribuna.com) That reflects how football data products have moved in the past year. When Tribuna launched its Football Xtra app in July 2025, it said the app covered more than 600 competitions across 160-plus countries with live statistics, historical archives, salaries and fan-community tools. (newsfilecorp.com) The company’s newer writing puts more emphasis on interpretation than on volume. A March 2026 Tribuna post said modern football prediction tools now weigh expected goals, shot accuracy, passing networks and defensive efficiency, not just league position, recent form and injury news. (tribuna.com) Tribuna is also framing the product around the World Cup calendar. The April 13 announcement explicitly tied the feature list to the run-up to the 2026 FIFA World Cup, when casual fans often want quick answers about likely winners, table swings and lineup changes without reading full statistical models. (einnews.com) The company describes itself as a sports media and technology business that combines a newsroom, a live-statistics platform and a fan community. Its home page currently presents scores, tables, team pages and news in one football-first feed rather than as separate products. (tribuna.com) The result is a different kind of football app: less a scoreboard, more a running explanation of what the numbers say before and during a match. (tribuna.com)