The chair gets the console with all the charts. Good for him. This is for the other 87 brothers — the ones actually shaking hands. Three taps to log a PNM, signal or not, while the house down the street is still asking the group chat for his name.
Sixty seconds of rambling becomes a clean profile — who he is, what he's into, what felt off. Three weeks from now you'll quote him word for word while another house argues about which kid was "the tall one."
You'll forget his hometown by the third handshake. Get it down now — a photo, a line, a voice note — and stop pretending you'll do it tonight. You won't. Nobody does.
It knows who you're on and who's drifting, and it tells you in three sentences. Tap to act, or just go handle it — the app doesn't need the credit.
Form letters lose recruits. RushPilot drafts from his actual file — the cookout he came to, the major he's grinding, the joke he made — so your text reads like you remembered everything. Because now you do.
No hand counts, no loudest-guy-wins. The full case — score, sub-scores, who vouched and why — is in your hand. Tap yes or no, watch the tally move. That's the whole ceremony.
Hold to record, pocket the phone, done — it uploads in the background, runs without signal, and syncs the second you've got bars again. Your longest session should be about forty seconds. Most of it talking.
What happens in the chapter stays in the chapter. Every voice note, rating, and read is brothers-only — the PNM never sees a word, hears a clip, or knows the file exists. Not a setting. A rule.
Records in a dead zone, syncs in the driveway.
The follow-up you'd forget, surfaced before the other house remembers him first.
The guys you're on, what changed, what's next — one screen.
"CS majors from Texas I haven't texted" — answered before you finish the thought.
Who showed, who bailed, who's worth walking over to — as they come through the door.
"Who's cooling that I've met?" — answered from everything the chapter knows.
Fifteen minutes on your chapter's actual PNM list — we import it and show you what tomorrow's standup would say. Bring questions. Or don't — it's short.