APP COMRADE

Amazon / Sports / LESIONADOS Y SANCIONADOS COMUNIO

REVIEW

A single-purpose Comunio sidekick that earns its place on the second screen.

Yamayoo's free Fire tablet utility tracks LaLiga injuries and suspensions for Comunio managers — narrow on purpose, useful on matchday, rough everywhere else.

BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 3 MIN READ

Amazon

Lesionados y Sancionados Comunio

YAMAYOO

OUR SCORE

6.6

AMAZON

★ 5.0

PRICE

Free

Comunio has been the default fantasy football game in Spain for the better part of two decades — a slow, transfer-market-driven season-long competition where lineup decisions on Friday afternoon turn on whether a midfielder picked up a fifth yellow or a striker felt a hamstring in training. The official Comunio app tells you the score. It does not tell you, clearly enough, who can’t play.

That gap is the entire reason an app like Lesionados y Sancionados Comunio exists. Yamayoo has built a single-screen utility that scrapes the Spanish sports press, sorts the casualties by club, and hands you a list you can scan in thirty seconds before the deadline.

It is not ambitious. It is not pretty. It does one thing a serious Comunio manager actually needs, in the language that manager already reads, on the tablet they already own — and at zero euros, the calculus is straightforward.

It exists so you don't have to refresh Marca on a phone tab five minutes before kickoff, and at that one job it is fine.

FEATURES

Lesionados y Sancionados Comunio is exactly what the name promises: a list of LaLiga players who are injured (lesionados) or banned for the next matchday (sancionados), aimed at Comunio managers picking a lineup before the deadline. The app is Spanish-only — no language toggle, no English mirror — and assumes you already know the player names, club shorthand, and how Comunio's fantasy scoring treats absences.

The structure is a flat list per club. Tap a team, see who is out and why — muscle injury, knock, accumulated yellows, red card suspension. There are no notifications, no lineup predictions, no expected return dates beyond what the source media has published, and no integration with the Comunio app itself. You read the list, you go back to Comunio, you bench the player.

It is free, ad-supported, and built for Fire tablets rather than phones — which means most of the screenshots are portrait shots of a tall table with a banner at the bottom. There is no in-app purchase to remove the ads.

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

The app is honest about its scope. It is one screen of information, refreshed often enough through the LaLiga season to be worth the install for anyone who plays Comunio seriously. Yamayoo did not try to build a full fantasy manager around it, and that restraint is the right call — Comunio managers already have Comunio, and what they actually need is the squad-status data Comunio itself doesn't surface clearly.

For a free utility on Amazon's tablet store — a corner of the app world that mostly contains shovelware and forgotten ports — a focused Spanish-language tool that does one job is a small pleasant surprise.

ROOM TO IMPROVE

Data freshness is the whole product, and it shows its age the moment a Friday press conference reshuffles a lineup. There is no live feed, no push when a player is downgraded from doubt to ruled-out, and no timestamp on the page telling you when the list was last updated. You are trusting that the developer is keeping pace with the Spanish sports press, which over a long season is a lot to ask of a free app.

The UI is plain to the point of austere — a list, a banner ad, no filters, no search, no way to favourite the eight players on your Comunio roster so you can scan them first. Anyone who doesn't read Spanish is locked out entirely, which is fine given the audience but worth saying out loud.

CONCLUSION

If you play Comunio, install it, keep it on a side screen during the Friday-to-Sunday window, and don't expect anything more than the list. If you don't play Comunio, there is no second use case here. Watch for whether Yamayoo ever adds push alerts — that single feature would lift the score by a full point.