GSPOT Is Now in Your Browser: A Full Web Version Walkthrough
GSPOT started as a Telegram bot, grew into a Mini App, and now works as a full-fledged web app at play.gspot.team. It's the same teammate search as in the bot, the same profiles, likes and matches, but full-screen and from any device: a desktop, a laptop, a tablet, or your work browser on a lunch break. Let's break down why a web version was needed, what's more convenient in it, and how to sign in within a minute.
Why a web version if there's already a bot
The honest answer: because gamers live at their PC. When you're sitting in front of a monitor deciding who to play with tonight, pulling out your phone and scrolling profiles in a narrow messenger window is extra friction. The web removes it entirely: open a tab next to your launcher, filter people by rank and throw out likes while an update downloads.
Second point, the screen. A player profile isn't a single line: games, ranks, goals, description, city. On a big screen all of it reads in full, with no scrolling or squinting, and the "like or skip" decision gets made faster and more accurately. It's especially noticeable in disciplines where you need to check the details: in CS2 you check the Premier rating and role, in Valorant the rank and agent pool, in Dota 2 the position and goals for the season.
And third: Telegram isn't for everyone, and not always. The web version works in any browser with no install, follow the link and start searching.
What's available in the browser
Let's nail down the main thing right away: the web isn't a stripped-down showcase, it's the full functionality of the service.
- Swipes and party search from a big screen. Scroll profiles in full-screen mode, clearer and faster than from a phone.
- Real-time match chats. A mutual like opens a chat right inside the service, messages arrive instantly with no page refresh.
- Sharing Steam and Discord profiles straight into chat. No need to dictate nicknames letter by letter, send your profile with one button and you're already adding each other as friends.
- Full profile setup. Games, ranks, description, city, all editable on the web, and with a real keyboard filling out a profile is many times faster.
- Flexible filters. Games, rank, city, time zone, build the results to fit you instead of scrolling everyone in a row.
- Safe search. Profiles go through automatic checks, so suspicious accounts simply don't reach you.
- A 3000+ game catalog. From AAA and esports to indie and VR, you can search for a teammate even by the most niche title.
What really shines on a big screen
Match chats
Messaging is where the phone loses to the PC the most. On the web the chat lives in a neighboring tab: you arrange a session without alt-tabbing out of the game, type on a keyboard instead of with your thumbs, and see the full conversation history. When you're hashing out roles, time and server with a new duo, it saves a ton of time and nerves.
Steam and Discord sharing
The classic pain of meeting people in games: "send your nick," "couldn't find it," "what region," "with the tag or without." In the web version, Steam and Discord profiles are shared straight into chat, your counterpart just clicks and adds you. Less manual input means fewer errors and a faster first match together.
Filters for your schedule
The time-zone filter is underrated: a teammate from your zone is online at the same time you are, so you won't have to wrestle your schedules together. Add a rank and city filter and the results turn into a list of people you can realistically start playing with today. How to properly vet a duo partner after a match, we covered in our guide to finding a duo in Valorant.
One account, both bot and web
You have a single account across all platforms. Filled out a profile in Telegram? It's already on the web. Caught a match on the PC? The conversation continues from your phone in the Mini App on the way home. Likes, matches, chats and settings sync automatically, nothing to move by hand. For more on how the service is built under the hood and why we bet on minimal friction from the very start, see the GSPOT story.
How to sign in: three ways
Signing in to the web version takes less than a minute, pick whichever suits you:
- By email. Enter your email, get a confirmation code, enter it, done. A classic with no extra steps.
- By code from the bot. If you already use GSPOT in Telegram, request a sign-in code from the bot and enter it at play.gspot.team, your account loads with all matches and settings.
- Via OAuth. Authorize through an external service in a couple of clicks, no passwords or long sign-in forms.
Whichever way you choose, you end up with the same profile, the one shared between the bot, the Mini App and the web.
Who the web version suits best
- Those who play on PC. The teammate search now lives where the game itself is, in a neighboring tab.
- Those who take their profile seriously. A keyboard makes it easier to write a proper description instead of "play ok dm me."
- Those who chat a lot with matches. Full-fledged chats with a big window and profile sharing.
- Those without Telegram at hand. A browser is everywhere, and that's enough.
In short
- The web version at play.gspot.team is the full GSPOT in your browser, no install.
- Inside: swipes, real-time chats, Steam and Discord sharing, full profile setup, flexible filters and safe search with automatic profile checks.
- The catalog is 3000+ games: AAA, esports, indie, VR.
- One account: bot, Mini App and web are synced.
- Sign-in is email, a code from the bot, or OAuth, all in a minute.
Open play.gspot.team from a PC, phone or tablet and find a teammate on GSPOT, it works in the browser and in Telegram.
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