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Sports & watch parties

Turn your lot into the place everyone wants to watch

A 17-foot mobile LED screen brings the live feed, the replay and the crowd reaction outdoors — so the game everyone came for is big enough, bright enough and shared. Across the Quad Cities, we deliver it, run it and tear it down so you can host.

17 ft × 10 ft of daylight-readable LED — roughly 170 square feet you can read from the back of the lotHD picture at a 3.9–4.8mm pixel pitch — sharp up close, clean from across the fieldTrailer-mounted for fast setup, sized to fit most lots and fieldsLive feed, replays, sponsor loops and graphics — powered by onboard generator or venue power
Check your date

Game day is better shared. A phone screen on a tailgate or a TV wheeled onto a patio asks everyone to crowd in and squint — the back rows lose the play, and the energy drains right when it should peak. A 17-foot mobile LED screen does the opposite: it puts the live feed, the replay and the scoreboard out where a whole crowd can see it at once, from the front of the lot to the far edge of the field.

Because the screen is daylight-readable, an afternoon kickoff looks as clear as a night game — no waiting for dusk, no glare washing out the action. We handle delivery, setup, an on-site technician for the whole event and teardown, so your job is the food, the seating and the people. Run it off the onboard generator where there's no power, or plug into the venue when there is.

Why it works

People want to watch the big game together

121.1M

adults plan to host or attend a Super Bowl watch party

with another 18.2 million planning to watch at a bar or restaurant — communal viewing is what people want, and a big outdoor screen gives them a reason to gather at your spot.

Source: National Retail Federation

73%

rate digital out-of-home screens favorably — versus 50% for TV

and 76% of recent viewers took action after seeing a digital out-of-home ad, so sponsor loops on the screen land instead of getting tuned out.

Source: OAAA / The Harris Poll

8,062,302

U.S. high school athletes — an all-time record in 2023-24

the first time participation topped eight million, a sign of how much local appetite there is for tournaments, league nights and team events built around the game.

Source: NFHS

Game-day watch parties that fill the lot

Picture the playoff push or the title game on a 17-foot screen in your parking lot: the live feed front and center, a clean HD picture from the closest tailgate to the back of the crowd, and the whole lot reacting to the same play at the same moment. That shared roar is the thing people drive across town for — and it's exactly what a screen this size makes possible that a TV on a cart never will.

The screen does double duty between whistles. Run sponsor loops, drink specials, the bracket or a hype reel during timeouts and halftime — digital out-of-home screens draw a 73% favorability rating versus 50% for TV, and 76% of recent viewers took action after seeing one, so the messaging works for your partners instead of getting ignored. With over 120 million adults planning to host or attend a watch party for the biggest game, the demand is there; the screen is what turns your spot into the one they pick.

Tailgates, tournaments and league nights

For tailgates, park the trailer at the heart of the lot and run the pregame feed, the rivalry highlights or a live in-stadium look so the parking-lot crowd never misses a snap. The trailer mount means fast setup in most lots, and the onboard generator covers the spots where there's no outlet in sight — fields, fairgrounds, a borrowed gravel lot.

For tournaments and league nights, the screen becomes the hub: live scoreboards, bracket updates, IMAG of the action on the far field and replays the families in the stands actually want to see. With more than 8 million high school athletes competing in 2023-24 — an all-time record, per the NFHS — and a majority of kids ages 6-17 playing a sport, every weekend brings a crowd of players, parents and fans who show up for the experience around the game as much as the game itself.

What every rental includes

You're renting a finished event, not just a screen on a trailer. Every booking includes delivery to your lot or field, full setup, an on-site technician who runs the screen for the duration, and teardown when it's over. The tech manages the feed, switches between live action, replays and sponsor graphics, and keeps the picture dialed in as the light changes through the afternoon.

Need more? Add content design for custom graphics and sponsor loops, extra hours for a long tournament day, multi-day coverage for a weekend bracket, or travel beyond the immediate Quad Cities. Tell us what the day looks like and we'll build the rental around it. See the screen & how it's used, or compare the options in LED screen vs. projector to see why daylight readability matters for a game that starts before sundown.

How it works

From your date to the final whistle

Tell us the date

Send us your event date, the venue or lot, and the kind of feed you're showing — a live broadcast, in-stadium IMAG, replays or sponsor loops. We'll confirm the screen fits your space and put a quote together. No prices guessed online; the quote form is where it's handled.

We deliver & run it

We bring the trailer-mounted screen to your spot, set it up, and an on-site technician runs it for the whole event — managing the feed, replays and graphics and keeping the picture sharp as the light changes. Onboard generator or venue power, your call.

You enjoy the event

You host the crowd while the screen does the heavy lifting. When the final whistle blows, we handle teardown and haul it out — you're left with a lot full of people who'll remember where they watched it.

Good to know

Sports & watch parties: common questions

Can you set up at a parking lot, park or field with no power?

Yes. The screen is trailer-mounted and runs off an onboard generator, so we can set up in lots, parks, fairgrounds and fields with no outlet nearby. Where venue power is available, we can plug into that instead. Either way, the on-site technician handles it.

Is the screen readable during a daytime game?

Yes. It's a high-brightness, daylight-readable LED screen, so an afternoon kickoff looks clear and sharp without waiting for dusk. The on-site technician keeps the picture dialed in as the light changes through the day.

How big is the screen, and how far back can people see it?

The screen is 17 feet wide by 10 feet tall — roughly 170 square feet. With an HD picture at a 3.9 to 4.8mm pixel pitch, it stays crisp up close and clean from across a lot or field, so the back rows see the play as well as the front.

Do you cover the whole Quad Cities area?

Yes. We serve Davenport and Bettendorf in Iowa, Moline and Rock Island in Illinois, and the surrounding Eastern Iowa and Western Illinois communities. Travel beyond the immediate area can be added — just tell us where the event is and we'll work it into the quote.

Check your date

Make your lot the spot everyone watches from

Get a quote