
A scoreboard has always done more than track results. It gives people a reason to show up again. That is true in a Gloucester City gym during a weeknight rec game, and it is true on a mobile leaderboard where familiar usernames climb and fall over a season of mini-events. The interesting shift is how many modern tournaments borrow the social rhythms of local sports. Regular match windows. Team chat energy. Friendly trash talk that stays friendly. Participation becomes a badge of belonging, even for players who rarely finish at the top.
Continue reading “Are Leaderboards and iGaming Tournaments Bringing Local Communities Together?”

