Session Reports allow organizers to look back at a game after it has ended and analyze what really happened on the field.
Instead of relying on memory or partial observations, the session can be reviewed as a time-based spatial record of player movement.
This feature is designed for large events, post-game analysis, briefings, and scoring.
Session replay in KML format
AFT makes it possible to generate a session recording in the form of a KML file.
The recording:
- represents player movement minute by minute,
- preserves the spatial layout of the event,
- and can include hundreds of players at once.
The KML file can be opened using the free Google Earth Pro application, available on all major platforms.
Time-based playback
When opened in Google Earth Pro, the session recording becomes an interactive replay.
Using the built-in time slider, you can:
- move forward and backward in time,
- observe how units maneuvered across the terrain,
- analyze formations, advances, and retreats.
This makes it possible to understand not just where players were, but when key movements occurred.
Practical use cases
Session Reports are especially useful for:
- post-game analysis
Reviewing decisions, routes, and timing. - event briefings and debriefings
Showing players how the game evolved and why outcomes occurred. - scoring and adjudication
Verifying objectives, territory control, or rule compliance. - organizer oversight
Understanding how hundreds of participants actually moved across the field.
For large milsim events, this level of insight is simply not achievable during live gameplay.
Built for scale
Session Reports are designed with large-scale events in mind.
They remain readable and useful even when tracking the movement of hundreds of units simultaneously.
Instead of raw logs or abstract statistics, organizers get a visual, intuitive replay of the entire event.
Availability
Due to the computational and infrastructure cost of generating and hosting large session recordings, Session Reports are currently available on request.
If you are interested in generating a Session Report for your event, please contact the project author directly.
A tool for serious events
Session Reports are not a novelty feature.
They are built for organizers who want insight, transparency, and accountability in complex, real-world games.
They turn a finished session into actionable knowledge — long after the last shot is fired.


