Reimagining Solo Tennis Training — A First Look at the Upcoming Tenniix App Update

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Every major update begins with conversations—questions players raise, friction points they notice, and ideas they wish existed inside the app.
The upcoming Tenniix App update will bring many of those requests together, shaping a training experience that gives players more structure on the court and more freedom in how they build drills.

This update is still in development, but here’s a first look at what will be introduced, organized into one new entry point and three core training features.


Guest Mode — A Simple Way to Explore the App

A new Guest Mode will be added as a lightweight way to preview the app before creating an account.
Players will be able to enter from the top-right corner of the registration page and look through the interface without setup.

Guest Mode is meant to make the app easier to understand at first glance—but saving drills, keeping personal settings, and building custom rallies will still require logging in.
For players planning to create and revisit their training patterns, registering an account will remain the essential step.


Training Mode — Setting Landing Spots and Choosing Ball Types

In the upcoming update, Training Mode will allow players to choose landing spots and select from nine ball types, each fed from two different machine positions depending on the drill.

1. Smart Feeding (Machine placed at the opposite baseline center)

From this position, the machine will feed standard hitting shots, suitable for rally rhythm and baseline training:

  • Baseline

  • Short Ball

  • Volley Short

  • Kill Shot

  • Moon Ball

  • Top Spin

  • Smash Ball

These shots will simulate realistic ball trajectories coming from the other side of the court.

2. Same-Side Feeding (Machine placed on the player’s side)

This position will be designed for warm-ups, consistency drills, or coaching-style feeds:

  • Feed Ball

  • Hand Feed

These shots will allow players to start drills closer, slow down the pace, or focus on technique without full-court distance.

All ball types will support parameter adjustments—speed, angle, spin, horizontal rotation, and intervals—and will naturally lead into deeper customization inside Custom Mode.


Custom Mode — Fine-Tuning Your Own Training Patterns

Custom Mode will give players a deeper level of control.
Once landing spots and ball types are chosen in Training Mode, players will be able to adjust each shot individually with parameters such as:

  • ball speed

  • shot angle

  • spin

  • horizontal rotation

  • serve interval

This allows every ball in the rally to behave differently, forming a personalized pattern based on rhythm, footwork movement, or specific tactical goals.


Match Mode — Six Patterns, Three Levels Each

The upcoming Match Mode will introduce six structured training routes, each representing a different type of rally situation:

  • Forehand & Backhand

  • Rally Shot

  • Attack Drill

  • Defense Drill

  • Move Rally

  • Spin Rally

Every route will offer three difficulty levels, creating a total of 18 combinations.
Match Mode will be ideal for players who want fast, ready-to-use sequences that resemble match pacing without needing to configure drills manually.


What’s Ahead

While development is still ongoing, this update represents a shift toward giving players more agency—more ways to shape their sessions, more clarity in how drills are built, and more realistic patterns for solo practice.

As we get closer to release, we’ll share updates on timing and additional details.
For now, this preview offers a glimpse into how the Tenniix training experience will continue to evolve.