Rule — 01
Communication over chaos
Every squad sets comms expectations before the first match, not after the third argument. Voice etiquette is a norm here, not an afterthought.
A community of tactical players
Play Pro Logic is where players who think a few moves ahead find teammates who do the same — across shooters, strategy games, co-op survival, and everything in between.
Field notes / 001
In 2021, a small group of tactical shooter players got tired of the usual routine: queue solo, land with three strangers, hope for the best. So they started keeping a private log — call it a dossier — of teammates who actually communicated, showed up on time, and didn't disappear after one bad round.
That log grew. Friends brought friends. Tactical shooters turned into strategy games, then co-op survival, then whatever anyone happened to be playing that week. The naming stuck: every member gets a unit file, every squad gets a case file, every event gets logged. It's a small bit of structure that keeps a large, chaotic hobby feeling personal.
Play Pro Logic is that dossier, grown up. Still player-run. Still built on the same idea — good teammates are worth tracking down.
Started as
A shared spreadsheet
Now
14,200+ logged members
Still
Run entirely by members
Operating principles
Not a mission statement written for a wall. A short list members hold each other to.
Rule — 01
Every squad sets comms expectations before the first match, not after the third argument. Voice etiquette is a norm here, not an afterthought.
Rule — 02
The squad finder asks about pace and available hours, not just rank. Compatibility beats coincidence.
Rule — 03
Your unit file follows you across titles. Move between genres without starting your reputation back at zero.
Rule — 04
Moderators are elected from the community. Rules are revisited every season based on member feedback, not boardroom decisions.
Inside the community
Nothing you have to figure out on your own.
Answer a short compatibility check — playstyle, pace, hours online — and get matched with players who actually fit, not just whoever's free.
Always-on, themed voice rooms by game and region. Drop in to warm up, plan a scrim, or talk through a rough loss.
Book practice matches against other squads with a shared calendar, reminders, and a simple post-match debrief template.
An opt-in profile that tracks playstyle notes and squad history, so new teammates know how you play before the match starts.
Paired sessions with veteran members who volunteer their time to help newer players read the game, not just grind it.
Conduct standards written and enforced by elected community moderators, with an appeals process anyone can follow.
Where we play
Squads are organized by genre, so the community moves with you between titles.
Round-based, comms-heavy. Not much room for a silent teammate.
Full squads, shared callouts, zone rotations planned in advance.
Draft strategy, lane assignments, and a shot-caller agreed on beforehand.
Long sessions, shared bases, and builds that hold up because someone remembered the blueprint.
Scouting, build orders, and replay reviews with people who want to actually improve.
League nights, shared car setups, and clean-racing etiquette that's actually enforced.
On the calendar
Every event is member-run and logged in the shared scheduler.
A low-key voice hangout to warm up, share clips, and line up a scrim partner for the week ahead.
Organized practice matches between community squads, logged in the scheduler with a quick debrief after.
A monthly, member-run tournament across rotating genres. Bragging rights, a champion badge, and a scoreboard everyone can see.
A guided walkthrough of the squad finder, voice lounges, and conduct code for anyone who just joined.
Veteran-led sessions on shot-calling, comms discipline, and reading the other team — open to every skill level.
Why people stay
Community readout
0
Active members
0
Countries represented
0
Squads formed this year
5.8min
Avg. time to find a teammate
From the unit files
“I found four teammates in a week who actually call rotations. Took two years of solo queue to find that once.”
“Nobody in my base disappears mid-build anymore. Turns out that was the whole problem.”
“The mentor sessions changed how I scout. Not just how fast I click.”
“Elected moderators actually respond. First community where reporting someone did anything.”
Before you ask
Yes. Creating a unit file, using the squad finder, and joining voice lounges are free for every member. The community runs on volunteer time, not outside sponsorship.
No. Casual players are just as welcome as competitive ones — the squad finder matches on communication style and available hours as much as skill.
We're organized by genre rather than a single title: tactical shooters, battle royale, MOBA, co-op survival, real-time strategy, and racing sims. If your game fits one of those, there's likely already a squad forming.
You complete a short compatibility check covering playstyle, pace, and online hours. The finder suggests squads and members whose answers line up with yours, and you decide who to message.
Reports go to elected community moderators, not a support ticket queue. Every action comes with a stated reason, and every member can appeal a decision.
No. Any member can start a squad, schedule a scrim, or propose a community event through the shared scheduler at no cost.
Ready when you are
Join the community, complete your unit file, and let the squad finder handle the introductions.
Prefer email? Reach the team at hello@playprologic.com