APP COMRADE

Amazon / Sports / PHILADELPHIA BASEBALL SCHEDULE

REVIEW

Philadelphia Baseball Schedule does one thing, and isn't from the team.

An unofficial Phillies schedule viewer from a third-party developer, free on the Amazon Appstore. Helpful if you only need first pitch times — and you can live with the caveats that come with any unaffiliated fan app.

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

Amazon

Philadelphia Baseball Schedule

INVENTIKA SOLUTIONS

OUR SCORE

6.0

AMAZON

★ 5.0

PRICE

Free

The Amazon Appstore has a quiet sub-genre of team-fan-schedule apps. One developer ships a near-identical title for every MLB franchise, every NFL team, sometimes the NBA — same template, swap the city. Philadelphia Baseball Schedule from Inventika Solutions is a textbook entry: free, narrow, unaffiliated with the Phillies organization, and honest about it.

Judged against the official MLB app, this loses on every dimension that involves live data, video, or notifications. Judged against the actual job a casual fan asks of a free utility — “tell me when the next home game is” — it does fine.

The interesting question with any unofficial team app is not whether it works today. It is whether the developer is still going to be maintaining the schedule scraper next season, and whether you’ll find out before you miss first pitch.

Unofficial team-schedule apps are a small genre on the Amazon Appstore, and this one is a representative example — clean enough, narrow on purpose, not from the team.

FEATURES

The pitch is right there in the name: a calendar of Philadelphia Phillies games. Open it on a Fire tablet and you get a list of upcoming games with date, opponent, and first pitch time, with home and away marked. There is no live scoring, no box score, no audio or video stream, and no roster data — this is a schedule reference, nothing more.

The developer, Inventika Solutions, ships a near-identical app for most MLB and NFL franchises. The shared codebase shows: the interface is generic, the branding is sparse, and the data appears to be scraped from a public schedule source rather than wired to an official feed. Updates happen, but on the developer's cadence, not the team's.

It is free, with ad inventory included — the standard arrangement for this category of unofficial app on the Amazon Appstore.

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

For the narrow use case of "what time is the Phillies game on Saturday and are they home," the app answers in two taps and doesn't ask for an account. That is genuinely all some fans want, and the official MLB app — with its mandatory sign-in, video upsells, and full league-wide UI — is overkill for it.

Honest naming helps too. The app does not pretend to be an official Phillies product. The icon is generic, the description is plain, and nobody installing it is being misled about what they're getting.

ROOM TO IMPROVE

Schedule accuracy is at the mercy of whatever source the developer pulls from. Rain delays, doubleheader scheduling, and late-season makeup games are exactly the moments a fan needs the schedule and exactly the moments an unofficial scraper is most likely to lag the team's own announcements. There is no public service-level commitment, and the review surface on the Amazon Appstore is too thin to verify how often it drifts.

Ad density on free Fire apps in this category tends to run heavy, and there is no paid tier to remove them. There is also no notification reliability worth counting on — push for an unofficial third-party app depends on the developer maintaining a backend that pings the right teams' schedules, and these apps have a history of going quiet when developers move on. Anyone wanting alerts for first pitch should set them in a calendar app and treat this one as a viewer.

CONCLUSION

Philadelphia Baseball Schedule is a fine free utility for Phillies fans on a Fire tablet who want a fast schedule glance and nothing more. For score updates, live audio, push alerts, or anything tied to the actual MLB product, install the official MLB app instead. The honest framing is the right one here — it's a fan-made schedule, not a team app, and judged on those terms it does the job.