Push the tournaments aside. They only came out in the late 90s anyway.
Since they have more history in the culture and make more sense from the perspective of integrating a competition into, without creating weird competition cultures like we have today.
We do this by literally stomping it out with a massive amount of judges.
So how come the best battles don't get prizes?
This is how we do it. Give the dancers good music, a big floor and the freedom to do what they want, and let the market of those dancers decide the fate of the jam.
Battle when you want. Battle who you want. Battle as long as you want. At the end, you vote on the app. Choose the person that killed it. You have to vote once, and you can't vote for yourself. That's the jam. No judges needed. No organization really needed. Just music and a dance floor.
Join WaitlistJust like any other app with groups online you can have events functioning as groups that run independently of each other.
Tutorials and music available for bboys and bgirls all in one place.
"Came for the judging app, stayed for the dope podcast and sweet suite of apps".
A dance friend finder/networking function that matches dancers up.
When you show up to the event, you sign in, you or the promoter takes a photo of you and puts in your info to the app. You as a dancer are now associated with that input in the app. Every competitor does this, and no one else. The jam happens, continuous music from a DJ, no stopping.