Layout Customization
The in-play scanner is built to adapt to how you work. You can rearrange columns, pin or hide matches, control sorting, and optionally use multiple layouts so the most relevant information stays visible and easy to scan during live matches.
Arrange columns
You can change the order of columns to match your reading flow. Grab the column handle and drag it left or right. To remove a column entirely, drag it out of the scanner area.
Sort matches by any column
Click the sort arrows in a column header to order matches by that statistic. Sorting can be ascending or descending.
If a column shows values for both teams (for example goals), the total is used for sorting.
Pin matches
Pinning keeps selected matches at the top of the scanner so you don’t lose track of them. This is useful when monitoring a few key games among many others.
Select one or more matches, then use the pin control in the toolbar or the pin icon in the controls column.
Unpin matches
There are several ways to unpin matches, depending on your workflow:
- Keyboard shortcut: select a pinned match and press U.
- Unpin last selected: use the pin menu in the toolbar or click the pin icon in the controls column.
- Unpin all: choose Unpin all from the pin menu.
Hide matches
Hiding removes matches from view without deleting them. This is useful for decluttering the scanner during busy periods.
Select one or more matches, then use the hide control in the toolbar or the hide icon in the controls column. To restore hidden matches, use the Unhide option from the same menu.
Using multiple layouts (optional)
In addition to customizing columns and sorting, the scanner supports multiple layouts. A layout is simply a saved version of your column setup, ordering, and sorting.
All layouts start from the same default view. Nothing is hidden or changed unless you explicitly customize it.
Multiple layouts are entirely optional. Many users work comfortably with a single well-configured layout.
Layouts exist to support different ways of working. For example:
- An overview layout with fewer, high-level columns
- A detailed layout with more statistics for deeper inspection
- A minimal layout used only to spot matches worth focusing on
If you’re not sure where to start, you can think of layouts as templates for different ways of observing matches. They’re not presets you must follow — just ideas you can adapt or completely ignore.
One common template is a “Signal layout”. This layout focuses on a small set of strong indicators: match time, score, momentum, shots, and picks. The goal is speed — quickly spotting matches that deserve attention, without getting distracted by secondary data.
Another useful template is a “Context layout”. Here, you keep additional in-play stats, odds movement, and pre-match averages visible. This layout is often used after something has already stood out, helping you understand why a match looks interesting.
Some users like to maintain a “Minimal filter layout”. In this setup, only a few columns are visible, turning the scanner into a lightweight match filter. When a game passes this first visual check, they switch to a more detailed layout for deeper analysis.
You might also dedicate a layout to a specific phase of matches. For example, one layout tuned for early-game behaviour, and another emphasizing late-game dynamics. Switching layouts then becomes a way to adapt as matches naturally progress.
Reset changes
If your layout becomes too cluttered, you can reset parts of the scanner or return everything to its default state using the reset menu.