Live Cricket TV HD organizes cricket information into a tab-based layout built around card navigation, with a blue gradient color scheme accented by yellow and white text throughout. The main screen divides content into clearly labeled sections — Live Score, All Country Team, IPL Detail, Records, and a Guide — each accessible through large touch targets that make drilling down from the global view to a single player profile straightforward.
Scores, Stats, and Match Coverage
The core of the app is ball-by-ball score tracking with full scorecards showing runs, wickets, overs, and partnerships. Text-based live commentary runs alongside the numbers for every delivery. Match cards display team flags or logos, scores across all innings, over counts, and final results — for example, Test match declared innings are shown with the standard "d" notation, giving experienced fans the detail they expect. The Recent, Live, and Upcoming tabs keep past results and fixture planning equally accessible. Tournaments covered include the ICC Cricket World Cup, ICC T20 World Cup, IPL, Asia Cup, BBL, PSL, CPL, BPL, and domestic and international tours.
Teams, Players, and IPL Focus
A country grid presents cricket-playing nations — India, Australia, England, Pakistan, New Zealand, South Africa, Sri Lanka, West Indies, Bangladesh, Canada, Ireland, Netherlands, Scotland, and others — identified by circular flag icons. Tapping through leads to team rosters and individual player profiles. The player detail screen shows biographical data including role, batting style, bowling style, date of birth, and a written career description; the example profile shown is Rohit Sharma of India. The app also has a dedicated IPL section covering team selection, past winners, match venues, and records, with teams including Kolkata Knight Riders, Rajasthan Royals, Gujarat Titans, Delhi Capitals, Lucknow Super Giants, and Sunrisers Hyderabad.
Design and a Noted Limitation
The interface maintains high contrast across screens, and match result cards supplement color coding with text labels like "Home Win" and "Away Win." That said, the information density in match cards is genuinely high, and the score detail text is small — something the app's own accessibility notes flag as a potential readability challenge on smaller displays.
The app's visual structure — bright flag icons arranged in a tight grid, each one a distinct color combination against a deep blue field — has the same kind of quick-scan pattern recognition that makes certain grid-based games satisfying to navigate. Each cell holds a distinct identity, and moving from the broad overview down to a single player's statistics follows the same logical drill-down rhythm.
Push notifications cover match starts, wickets, milestones, and results. The app is free with no subscriptions, and explicitly states it has no affiliation with any official cricket board or organization and provides no live video or streaming content.