The Hunting App Built for the Field
Public land maps, draw odds, live conditions, AI hunting advice, and hand-picked gear — everything a serious hunter needs, in one app.
Built for Hunters
Skoped combines the tools scattered across a dozen apps into one clean, offline-ready platform built around how hunters actually work.
300,000+ public hunting areas nationwide — WMAs, national forests, wildlife refuges — with offline support so you're covered when cell service drops.
Track your application points across every state. Get deadline reminders 30, 15, 7, and 1 day out. Never miss a draw window again.
Real-time wind heatmap, 3-day hourly forecast, radar overlay, and moon/solunar data — all layered directly on the map.
43 huntable species with scat ID, diet, habitat, shot placement, field dressing guides, and sex identification photos.
Log your kills with GPS coordinates, photos, weight, and a full weather snapshot. View your harvest on an interactive map.
Start a hunt, track time and distance covered, log shots taken, and save a complete record of every day in the field.
Gear Up
Inside the app, every species page surfaces the gear that actually matters for that hunt — curated by category and filtered to what you're chasing. No noise, no generic lists.
All gear recommendations are available directly through the Skoped app, filtered by the species you're hunting.
AI Hunting Assistant
Cletus is a 68-year-old Appalachian hunting guide who's been in the woods his whole life. Ask him about wind strategy, rut timing, public land tactics, field dressing, or which call to run. He gives real answers — not generic outdoor advice.
Try It FreeWhen should I start rattling for whitetail in Tennessee?
Cletus
Wait till you're seein' scrapes freshen up and bucks movin' daylight hours — that's your signal the pre-rut's kickin' in. Here in Tennessee that's usually first week of November, give or take. Start light, ticklin' the tines together, see if anything's curious. Save the hard rattlin' for peak rut when bucks are wound up and lookin' for a fight. Wind's everything — don't rattle with it at your back or you're just ringin' the dinner bell for deer downwind to blow out on you.
What gear do I need for a spot-and-stalk elk hunt?
Cletus
Pack light or go home hurtin'. You need glass that'll pick apart a basin at 600 yards — good binos, a tripod, and a spotting scope if you've got the back for it. Boots that won't quit on day four. A pack that can handle a boned-out bull — Stone Glacier or Kifaru country. And learn to cow call before you go. Most folks can't close the stalk without makin' a sound to turn that bull broadside.
Available Now
Download on iOS and start scouting public land, tracking your draws, and gearing up for the season — all in one place.