At the domestic level, she plays for the Watsonian cricket club, for English teams The Blaze (formerly known as Lightning) and Kent, and for Welsh Fire.
She has said that he was full of enthusiasm for the game every time the family played it, either in the back garden or on the beach, or watched it on television.
She therefore began a maths degree at Loughborough University in England, where her sister was already combining the study of sports science with playing cricket as a professional.
[23] However, Kent did take part in the inaugural 50-over Women's London Championship (WLC), which was organised as "... the start of the county comeback.
She scored an aggregate of 165 runs at 41.25, with two half centuries including 63* opening the batting against Middlesex, and was Kent's T20 Player of the Tournament.
[29] In June 2020, Bryce and her sister were signed to play for the East Midlands Regional Hub,[4][30] which was then based at Loughborough University and was due to field the team Lightning in England's new regionally-based women's elite domestic competitions.
[4] In that year's inaugural 50-over Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy, Bryce ended up as the competition's second-highest run scorer.
[32][33] Her innings included four successive half centuries culminating in a share in a partnership with Bethan Ellis of 148 runs in 33 overs against Central Sparks (a new record partnership for any wicket in the RHF Trophy),[4][32][34] and then, a week later, a List A career-best 136* in her team's final match, also against Central Sparks.
[37][38] As was observed by Emerging Cricket at the time, the full time contracts not only "... supported [Bryce and her sister] financially...", but also gave them "... increased access and opportunities to develop their game as professional cricketers beyond their lives as students and without having to potentially sacrifice representing their nation to earn a living overseas.
"[37] In the ensuing season, 2021, Bryce played a much less prominent role in the second RHF Trophy, recording only 202 runs in seven matches at 28.85, with a highest score of 90.
[33] Late in 2022, the Lightning team parted company from Loughborough University, was rebadged as The Blaze, and was relocated to Trent Bridge, Nottingham, to become the East Midlands' new regional side.
[46] Her batting performance in that year's Hundred turned out to be much more satisfactory; amongst her teammates, she finished with an aggregate second only to Tammy Beaumont and an average second only to Hayley Matthews.
[6][10] The same year, she was awarded her first international cap, against Papua New Guinea, in the ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier in Thailand.
[10] During the latter match, which Scotland won by eight wickets with 26 balls remaining, she participated in two run outs of PNG players, but was not required to bat.
[52] In July 2016, Bryce scored 109 runs and was "a very handy wicket-keeper" in the Europe qualifier tournament for the 2017 Women's Cricket World Cup in Essex, England.
[10][62] Her individual achievements during the qualifier were summarised by the ICC as follows: "In the first low-scoring match against Uganda, she made almost 77% of the team's total of 43, scoring 36*.
"[63]On the other hand, as Bryce put it herself in an interview published in September 2020, "... it was definitely mixed emotions at the end of the tournament as we’d been one win away from going to the World Cup so that was disappointing.
[63] In June 2019, Bryce was again selected in Scotland's squad, this time for the three team 2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Europe tournament in Spain.
In the absence of her sister, who had commitments with Loughborough Lightning in the English domestic Super League competition, Bryce was appointed to captain the Scottish side.
[81] In the 20 WT20I matches she had played up to that date, she had scored two half centuries, against Thailand and the Netherlands, respectively,[59][84] had achieved an average of just under 40 at over a run a ball,[59] and had claimed 14 catches and 15 stumpings.
[59][85] In October 2019, Bryce was selected in the Women's Global Development Squad, ahead of a six-match series in Australia.
[86] The COVID-19 pandemic then intervened, and the Scotland team was left facing an uncertain future after several years of progress and rebuilding.
[4] Also in May 2021, Bryce played for Scotland in the team's post-COVID-19 return to international competition, in a bilateral series against Ireland at Stormont in Belfast.
[97] Bryce's high point in the tournament was in her team's opening contest, against the Netherlands, in which she was Player of the Match for scoring 46 in 36 balls to guide Scotland to a six wicket victory.
[104] Bryce then stood in as captain for Scotland's next two matches, during a home bilateral series against Ireland in September 2022, as her sister was absent.
[107] Bryce's next appearances for Scotland were at the 2022 ICC Women's T20 World Cup Qualifier in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
[114][115] During the inaugural Invitational, held in Dubai in May 2022, she participated in all seven of Spirit's matches, made an aggregate of 145 runs at 20.71 with a top score of 39, took two catches and achieved four stumpings.
[6] ESPNcricinfo observes that Bryce is a "... powerful cutter of the ball ... strong down the ground against spin ... [and] ... also a superb wicketkeeper ..."[2] In May 2021, Matt Roller wrote for ESPNcricinfo that she: "... is slightly taller [than her sister Kathryn] and particularly strong playing cut shots, though she uses her feet to hit spinners through mid-on and mid-off too.
[6] She also credits former Scotland international player Kari Carswell, who has coached and played alongside her, as having had a "massive impact".
[44][116] While in quarantine ahead of the 2022 Commonwealth Games Cricket Qualifier in Malaysia, she passed the time by practising her putting.