Amazon / Sports / SPORTS MEET
REVIEW
Sports Meet is a one-line app store listing pretending to be a sports app.
GOMCO APPS ships a Fire-tablet utility whose entire pitch is 'find all the details and info about the Sports Meet, just a click away' — and the store page tells you almost everything else you need to decide.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 11, 2026 · 3 MIN READ
The Amazon Appstore has a long tail of single-sentence apps. You find them when a search for an event, a team, or a topic returns a tile from a developer you don’t recognise, with a description so short it fits inside the Appstore preview without truncation. Sports Meet is one of those tiles.
Its entire pitch is “Now find all the details and info about the Sports Meet, just a click away!” There is no second sentence. The developer, GOMCO APPS, runs a catalogue of similarly-shaped utilities — each one a thin launcher around a single topic. The work of reviewing this app is almost entirely the work of reading its listing carefully and noticing what is missing.
What’s missing is the part that would tell you whether to install it. Which sports meet. Which year. Which sport, even. The title is generic enough to apply to a school field day, a national track championship, or a regional league fixture — and the listing doesn’t pick one.
When a description fits in a single sentence and the developer is a prolific 'info about X' shop, the app is the description.
FEATURES
The entire vendor-supplied description reads: "Now find all the details and info about the Sports Meet, just a click away!" That is the feature list. There is no roadmap copy, no screenshot tour in the listing text, no mention of live scores, schedules, push alerts, or a specific tournament. The category is Sports, the price is free, and the developer is GOMCO APPS — a studio whose Amazon presence is built around small "find info about X" Fire-tablet utilities rather than a single flagship product.
What an app like this typically does, in practice, is bundle a handful of web links, an RSS-style news pull, or a stitched-together set of Wikipedia and search results behind a branded launcher. The Amazon Appstore listing for this title carries no rating count, no recent reviews, no release date, and no install counter visible to the public — the kind of metadata vacuum that, on Fire tablets, almost always points to a small, lightly-maintained download.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The honest win here is scope. The developer hasn't oversold the app. There is no "AI-driven sports intelligence platform" copy, no promise of features it can't deliver, no subscription wall. It's free, it's small, and it does whatever its one sentence says — present some details about "the Sports Meet" when you tap.
For someone who lands on it through Fire-tablet search and just wants a launcher that opens to a single topic, that's not nothing. Expectations are correctly set at zero.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
Nearly everything. The listing doesn't name a specific sports meet, a year, a country, a sport, or a league — "Sports Meet" reads like a placeholder title left in by mistake. Without that context, the app can't be evaluated as a fan utility, a school-event companion, or a regional tournament tracker. Anyone searching for a real event by name will scroll past this immediately.
The metadata gaps compound the problem. No review count, no release date, no installs, no developer site linked from the listing. On Fire tablets that bundle of absences is usually a signal that the app was uploaded once, hasn't been refreshed, and won't be. A two-line "what this app actually shows you" update to the description would lift the score meaningfully.
CONCLUSION
Skip unless the Amazon Appstore search that led you here named a specific event you recognise. The app appears to be a generic info-aggregator from a developer with a long tail of similar single-purpose utilities, and the listing offers no reason to choose it over a browser bookmark.