What she does?
- Checks in tickets. Fast.
- Returns status with full reason.
- Other things too.
Check-ins that do not improvise. Accepted or rejected with reason, synced history, and consistent behavior online, offline, or in local network mode.
Apps require Hydra Bridge to be installed on your website.
Accepted. Rejected. With reason. And history.
Hydra stores exactly what the check-in workflow needs. And displays information right where you expect it.
Need self-check-in? Or just want to fire check-in operator?
This works by itself.
And with the upcoming hardware support, you can also connect it to turnstiles, ramps or anything you can possibly imagine.
Developed by humans who spent more than two decades on the event front lines.
May 12, 2026 09:00
May 12, 2026 14:00
Existing Hydra Bridge adapters, same API discipline, one predictable check-in flow.
No gimmicks. Just practical behavior where it matters most.
No signal at the venue? Hydra keeps working from a locally stored attendee database, so check-ins do not stop when Wi-Fi does.
Devices on the same network coordinate directly. No internet, no cloud, no waiting. Quiet and reliable in the background.
Hydra is fast. Not "marketing fast" - actually fast. Really, really fast. Blink-and-you'll-miss-it fast. Scan, feedback, next person. The line moves. People notice.
When internet comes back, Hydra syncs everything in the background. It has buttons (just in case), but there is no need to press them unless you want to.
Turn a device into a self-service check-in station. Fewer staff needed, shorter lines, and yes, people will figure it out without asking ten questions.
Run Hydra across multiple devices at once. Everything stays in sync, even when things get busy. Especially when things get busy. If it has an operating system, Hydra will work. Probably.
We've seen it all and learned the hard way, so you do not have to. Double scans, late arrivals, edge cases, and all the usual event-day classics. Hydra handles them without turning check-in into a guessing game.
Works seamlessly with many WordPress-based ticketing systems, with integrations expanding constantly. CSV import is also on the way. If you have a list, you're good to go.
Not a fallback. It's the foundation. Hydra assumes things will break and keeps going anyway. Hydra might be young, but it will not protest and slam doors when you cut off the internet.
Small event, thousands of attendees, tens of thousands of attendees, hundreds of events... same speed, same behavior. No sudden surprises when things ramp up.
Minimal and super-flexible UI, clear signals, no clutter. When there's a line forming, the last thing you need is an interface asking for attention.
Multi-language support is on the way. Hydra will speak more languages soon. For now, it speaks "gets the job done." Let us know which languages we should prioritize.
Because a great event doesn’t start on stage.
It starts at the door.