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Petanque Life

Jugadores y participantes

Veteran Player

Competes in senior age categories (55+, 60+, 65+).

En resumen

Veteran players keep competing in 55+, 60+ and 65+ categories where pétanque rewards experience and judgment. Petanque Life gives them an interface that respects ageing eyes and hands, plus easy access to the right competitions nearby.

Motivación

Staying active, social connection, competition at appropriate level.

Contexto

The veteran player has often played for decades, knows the sport intimately, and is the backbone of weekday club life. Many are retired, available midweek, and form the volunteer core that keeps clubs running.

They compete in age-categorised veteran tournaments — championnat des vétérans, distriktsmästerskap för veteraner, regional senior leagues — where the format is shorter, the travel manageable and the social element central. Many are not native digital users: they grew up with paper licences, posted entry forms and clubhouse noticeboards.

Adoption depends entirely on whether the digital tool feels respectful, patient and useful, not whether it is technically sophisticated. A veteran will champion a tool that works for them, and warn off a whole club from one that does not.

Necesidades a fondo

1

Adaptive interface options including larger text, high contrast and reduced motion to support comfortable everyday use

Por qué importa

Many veteran players have presbyopia, mild cataracts, reduced fine motor precision or arthritis in the fingers. A standard mobile interface — small tap targets, low-contrast grey-on-grey, animated transitions, swipe gestures — is genuinely hostile to them.

The result is not just inconvenience: it is exclusion. A veteran who fails to register for a tournament because the calendar text was too small to read accurately is not a user who tried; they are a user who quietly stopped trying.

Accessibility is not a feature for this group, it is the prerequisite.

Cómo lo cubre Petanque Life

Accessibility Options include three text-size tiers, high-contrast and dark themes, reduced-motion mode, larger tap targets across the entire app, and voice-readable summaries for tournament listings and rankings. The Simplified Interface mode hides advanced features by default and surfaces only the four or five actions a veteran player typically needs.

2

Clear onboarding with patient guidance, printable references and minimal jargon for players new to digital tools

Por qué importa

A 68-year-old player who has just been told the federation is moving to digital licences may have never installed an app before. The onboarding moment is fragile — one confusing screen and the user closes the app, asks a grandchild for help, then never returns.

Patient, step-by-step guidance with the option to print key references (digital licence as a paper backup, tournament confirmation as a paper slip) bridges the gap between paper-era trust and digital convenience. This need is most acute in the first 48 hours of use.

Cómo lo cubre Petanque Life

First-time onboarding uses a guided five-step flow with skip-and-return-later support, jargon translated into plain federation language, and clear illustrations. Every key artefact — Digital License, tournament confirmation, payment receipt — has a print-friendly view sized for A4.

A help shortcut is permanently visible, connecting to written guides and a phone-friendly support contact at the federation level.

3

Easy filtering for veteran categories (55+, 60+, 65+) with nearby competitions and travel-friendly formats

Por qué importa

Veteran tournaments are often local, half-day formats with shorter brackets to suit older bodies. They tend to cluster around weekday afternoons or Saturday mornings rather than full weekends.

Finding them today means checking three or four regional websites, calling a club secretary or asking at the boulodrome. The need is for a single, age-aware view that shows only the competitions a player can enter, within a comfortable driving distance, with format details (number of games, expected end time, lunch arrangement) up front.

Travel-friendliness matters as much as competition itself.

Cómo lo cubre Petanque Life

Veteran Category Filtering applies the player's birthdate to surface only eligible 55+, 60+, 65+ events. Tournament Discovery defaults to a sensible radius and adds format metadata: game count, expected duration, lunch included, indoor/outdoor, parking.

Digital License is always one tap from the tournament card for the inevitable on-arrival check.

En la práctica

It is Tuesday morning. Bertil, 67, has just had his coffee. He opens Petanque Life on his iPad — large text mode, high contrast theme, dark on cream.

The home screen shows his Digital License, his next club Wednesday session and three veteran tournaments within 50 km this month. He taps the 60+ doublette in Tranås — Saturday, four games, lunch at noon, finish around 15:30, indoor in case of rain. Comfortable.

Two taps to register, his usual partner pre-filled. He prints the confirmation slip from the desktop view his daughter set up for him last visit. The app reminds him his licence renews in three weeks — one tap to renew, payment via Swish stored from last year.

Saturday morning the app shows directions to the boulodrome and his bracket position. After the tournament he looks at the result, sees his name on the podium, and shares it with his grandchildren via the family share button.

Cómo se mide el éxito

  • First-time onboarding completion rate among users over 60 above 85%
  • Accessibility-mode adoption among 60+ users above 60%
  • Veteran tournament registration completed in under 60 seconds for repeat users
  • Support contact rate after first week of use under 5% of veteran users
  • Veteran license renewal completed digitally above 75% within first season of rollout per tenant

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