From the makers of AppScreenshotStudio
You optimized your App Store listing. Is your app's website found on Google?
AppScreenshotStudio helps you win one search engine: the App Store. But most indie apps also have a marketing site, a landing page, a blog. Those get found on a different engine: Google. QueryScope brings that site's Google Search Console into your IDE, so your coding agent can read it and act on it.
Google Search Console, in Cursor and Claude Code.
We built it to run this site's SEO
The blog you were just reading is part of AppScreenshotStudio's own SEO engine. We got tired of alt-tabbing to the Search Console web UI to see which pages were slipping, so we built QueryScope: it reads our real Search Console data right inside the IDE and tells the coding agent which pages are decaying, ranking for the wrong intent, or getting shown but not clicked. Then we productized it.
It is the same instinct as AppScreenshotStudio: take the workflow we run ourselves and turn it into a tool you can run too.
What QueryScope does
Your real data, not estimates
It reads your own Google Search Console over a read-only grant you approve and can revoke. Not a third-party rank estimate: your actual clicks, impressions, position, and queries.
In your IDE, over MCP
Ask your coding agent "how is my site doing" in the terminal. No browser tab, no export. Works in Cursor, Claude Code, Cline, and Windsurf.
Finds the fix, not just the number
It flags the pages ranking for the wrong intent, quietly decaying, or shown but never clicked, and queues the fix your agent can make next.
Is this for you?
A good fit if
- Your app has a website, landing page, or blog that gets Google impressions.
- You run your own SEO and live in an AI IDE (Cursor, Claude Code, Cline, Windsurf).
- You want to catch a page slipping before the traffic is gone.
Not yet if
- Your app has no web presence beyond the App Store listing.
- You do not use an AI IDE.
- You expected it to read your App Store listing. It reads Google web search, not App Store search. For the App Store side, that is what AppScreenshotStudio and the free ASO tools are for.
Two search engines, one instinct
App Store search rewards conversion: the screenshots and metadata that turn an impression into an install. Google web search rewards relevance and clicks: the pages that answer what someone typed. Same job on both, get found, but they are different machines with different data. AppScreenshotStudio covers the first. QueryScope gives you eyes on the second.
See your site's Search Console where you code
QueryScope is independent and not affiliated with Google. It reads your own Search Console over an OAuth grant you approve and can revoke at any time.