HyperPulse is turning youth sports moments into understandable performance context.
A parent-managed wearable and app system for sessions, practices, and games where families and coaches want a clearer record of what happened after the moment is gone.


Validating real units before broader outreach.
Reliable enough for a clean demo story.
Feather bench now; Gen 2 Pro pending arrival.
Small relationship list, no mass blast.
A context layer around the youth sports experience.
HyperPulse is not trying to replace the scoreboard, the stream, the coach, or the parent in the stands. It is being built to add a simple performance record that can sit beside the experience families already care about.
Session capture
A compact sensor records motion-based session context during practice, training, or controlled test sessions.
App receive flow
The app needs to pair, receive, reconnect, and show the session without forcing a coach or parent to fight the setup.
Understandable readout
The dashboard must make the point quickly: what happened, what changed, and what is worth reviewing later.
Exportable evidence
A screenshot or export should let a family, coach, or partner see that this is a working prototype, not just an idea.
Youth sports are already emotional. The product should respect that.
Families use tools like GameChanger because presence matters. Grandparents follow from another state. Parents check a clip between meetings. Coaches revisit a moment later that night. HyperPulse belongs in that same emotional lane: helping people feel closer to moments they otherwise would have missed or forgotten.

Coach-level readout that can be understood quickly.

Plain explanation of what the device captures and what it avoids.

Parent/guardian controls and competition-use restraint.
Before bigger conversations, 3-5 devices need to pass this.
Session captured
A real unit records a session with a known build ID and timestamp.
App receives it
The app pairs, receives data, and survives a reconnect check.
Readout makes sense
A parent or coach can understand the session without a long explanation.
Export exists
Screenshot, CSV, or shareable proof artifact is saved for each test.
Battery is credible
Runtime, charging, and reconnect behavior are acceptable for a demo.
Arm the session when the moment is about to start.
HyperPulse is being tuned so the sensor can be awake and taped on before the event without mixing normal pregame walking into the official session totals.
1. Shake awake
Wake the sensor and confirm the app sees the device before taping it in place.
2. Tape the sensor
Place it high on the upper back using the current prototype tape routine.
3. Tap Arm Session
Arm from the app right before the event. Prep movement is ignored until activity begins.
4. Review or disarm
The app can show live, paused, or ready status and keep the session record separate from warmup movement.
The waiting window is runway.
Gen 2 Pro hardware is pending arrival. The smart move is to use that time to flash and stress test Feather units, produce one clean demo story, tighten proof copy, and begin five quiet relationship feelers.
Flash 13 Feather units, choose the strongest 3-5, and record a short evidence path for each device.
Create one clean demo: device on bench or athlete-safe test setup, app receive flow, parent/coach view, export artifact.
Run the same proof gate before deciding whether Feather units stay as demos, stress rigs, or backups.
Start with five quiet feelers from a 20-name research list. Ask for feedback, not a transaction.
Boundaries are part of the product.
Not clinical guidance
HyperPulse is for athletic performance context and should not guide health decisions.
Not a sideline authority
Teams and families should follow normal supervision, event rules, and professional judgment.
Not a high-stakes outcome promise
The product should help explain effort and development, not imply opportunities it cannot control.
Not a replacement for existing platforms
It is complementary to scorekeeping, streaming, scheduling, and team communication tools.
We are looking for feedback partners before big noise.
Best-fit conversations right now: youth sports platforms, tournament operators, baseball/softball academies, serious local clubs, and sports-tech operators who understand families, coaches, and field reality.