Open play vs round robin vs king of the court
If you run a weekly session you’ve probably heard all three names used interchangeably. They’re not the same thing — and picking the right one decides how fair the night feels.
Open play
Players arrive across a window, courts run continuously, and someone forms the next foursome as a court frees up. It’s the most social format and the most forgiving of uneven numbers and late arrivals — but “whoever’s waiting plays next” quietly produces repeat partners and lopsided rest unless someone tracks it.
Round robin
A fixed field is scheduled in advance so every player meets a planned set of partners and opponents. It’s fair and predictable — but it assumes everyone is there at the start and stays to the end. One drop-out or late arrival breaks the chart.
King of the court
Winners move up toward the “king” court, losers move down. It’s competitive and self-organising, but the strongest players cluster at the top and beginners can get stuck at the bottom — not ideal for a mixed-level social night.
Which should you run?
For most community sessions the answer is open play with a fair rotation engine: you keep the social, drop-in feel, but the partner/opponent/rest tracking that makes a round robin fair happens automatically. That’s exactly what PicklePal does — open play structure, round-robin fairness.
Put it into practice
Build a fair rotation for your group right now — free, no sign-up.
Open the builder →Questions
Is open play the same as a round robin?
No. Open play is a drop-in, continuously-running format; a round robin is a pre-scheduled fixed field. PicklePal gives you open play that’s tracked as fairly as a round robin.
What’s best for beginners?
Open play in Balanced mode — it mixes everyone and evens out teams so newer players aren’t stranded against the strongest court, the way king of the court tends to do.