From AI-powered bidding “sparring partners” to bridge-themed rogue-like video games, the world of bridge is evolving fast. Alex J. Coyne explores the latest innovations, apps, and technical tools designed to sharpen your game and simplify your scoring in 2026.
Bridge is a game that naturally attracts (and certainly builds) sharp minds. We can thank many of these sharp minds for being innovators and inventors, and bringing some new things into the game we can all enjoy.
In this post, we’re covering all sorts of new bridge stuff including hand-helpers, deal-analyzers, and puzzle-sites.
What’s new in bridge? Here’s a look at some of the interesting innovations, apps, and bridge gadgets that have popped up on our radar so far for 2026. If you’re looking for more New Bridge Links be sure to check our page, we update it often.
Casual Bridge: Bridge with house-rules and 12 set bidding contracts.
Casual Bridge is bridge with an interesting twist: instead of the 5 standard suit contracts (♣ ♦ ♥ ♠ NT), players have 12 different strains to bid. Each strain has its own card-ranking rules.
BridgeDummy.com: Solve realistic bridge puzzles and improve your game.
BridgeDummy was developed by veteran bridge player Nir Khutorsky: simply, the website is designed to help players sharpen up their bidding and opening leads.
According to their website description, “BridgeDummy is a bridge training platform. You solve realistic puzzles and get instant feedback on your bidding and opening lead decisions.”
The system tells you, instantly, where you may have messed up (or didn’t). BridgeDummy is a bit like a sparring partner – and if you’d like to read more, Great Bridge Links takes a closer look at it here.
Sure, you could ask an aunt/uncle, parent/grandparent, friend/partner for bidding advice … But sometimes grandma can be really mean around the bridge table, and that’s what BridgeDummy is for.
Bridge Scoring Helper: Play and the system will score.
Scoring shouldn’t always be done manually.
Beginners have to focus on their playing, and too much focus on scoring is a distraction. It’s true for most games from chess to Scrabble – when you’re really into the game, it’s easier for the computer to keep score.
Play My Board: Compete, compare, and play real bridge boards.
Just Declare is one, stripped-down way to improve only your declarer play.
However, it’s not the only one out there: Play My Board allows you to play through real bridge boards – and then compete and compare your results with others.
According to their website: “Practice bridge by playing real boards, compare results, and follow player rankings on Play My Board.”
BridgeChampions: Practice hand recognition drills and more.
How fast can you spot a bridge hand?
Pattern recognition is an important part of bridge playing. Some hands have standard patterns – just like some Backgammon moves are considered standard, or how piano chords can be spotted on sight.
BridgeChampions (at their website here) has “clear lessons, hands-on practice, and quizzes for beginner and experienced players.”
Have fun with it!
Bridge Hand Analysis: Run a single-dummy analysis.
Bridge Hand Analysis is one of the more technical apps. It’s particularly useful if you want to analyze your game (or someone else’s).
All you have to do is “upload a PBN file, review the 4 hands, pick a contract + declarer, then run single-dummy analysis.”
Bridge Hand Analysis was made by John Webber (thank you!), a “native of Seattle, but living in Germany since 1988” according to his BridgeWinners profile.
He took a short break from the game, and in 2025 began playing again – and built this!
Bridge Handview Generator: Modify and play digital bridge hands.
Bridge Handview Generator allows users to modify and play digital bridge hands – all by simply inputting the BBO URL or file.
It’s been updated with a handy diagram export: if you’re a bridge author or blogger, this is the really good part.
Bridge Architect: Create and manage bidding systems.
Every partnership has their own bidding system – and if you don’t, you might just be trying to track the systems and conventions you’ve already learned. It’s something like a spellbook, but you don’t need any Eye of Newt.
Bidding Architect (from Bridgetricks.com) allows you to “build, organize, and share your bridge bidding systems with our interactive visual editor.”
Bridge Tricks also has an active playing community, plus what they call a “bridge lab” to share your bidding systems with others.
New on Steam: Overtrick
If you’ve always wished for an online bridge game that includes some rogue-like or role-playing elements, Overtrick answers your requests just like a kind internet genie.
Overtrick is a single-player game where you play through stages, buy special abilities, and climb the ranks: all set in 1920s high society. The official description calls it a “trick-taking deckbuilder with style!” and we cannot disagree.
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