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Product vision

Adventurers' Log is a mobile-first Old School RuneScape companion app for tracking personal goals and celebrating friend milestones.

The app is early-stage. These docs describe the product direction for the MVP while the first usable version is being built.

The problem

OSRS progress is long-term, personal, and social. Players spend weeks or months chasing goals like 90 Slayer, 2,000 total level, base 80s, a first fire cape, or a meaningful collection-log drop.

Most existing tools are great at exposing data, but they do not create a satisfying social progress loop. Hiscores show rankings. Wiki tools help with knowledge. RuneLite plugins improve the game client. Discord bots broadcast updates into chat. Adventurers' Log is focused on the space between those tools: helping friends see what each other is working toward and celebrate when progress happens.

Core promise

I can see what my friends are working toward, follow their goals, and get notified when they hit something cool.

MVP proof points

The first useful version should prove three things.

Track a player

Adventurers' Log should be able to track an OSRS username, refresh player data, and show meaningful recent progress.

Define a goal

Players should be able to declare goals attached to tracked OSRS usernames, starting with clear stat-based goals such as:

  • 90 Slayer
  • 2,000 total level
  • base 80s

Future versions may expand into boss, activity, quest, and collection-log goals once data-source support is proven.

Turn progress into social moments

Progress should become something friends can react to and celebrate. Goal completions, major level gains, and future milestone events should appear in a friend feed and eventually trigger notifications.

What Adventurers' Log is not

Adventurers' Log is not trying to replace every OSRS tool.

It is not:

  • a hiscores clone
  • a RuneLite plugin
  • a Discord bot
  • a wiki or helper tool
  • an OSRS account ownership verification system for the MVP

The product is centered on user-declared goals, friend relationships, and social progress moments rather than global rankings or exhaustive game data.

Product direction

The long-term direction is a social progress loop for OSRS: track what matters, declare what you are chasing, and celebrate the moments that make the grind feel worth it.