I'm astonished.
By now I would have expected someone to offer to hack the firmware of the scope, to display the numerical result of (trace average frequency) x (constant) in a little window on the scope screen.
While someone else comes up with a totally TTL solution, stand-alone, no scope needed, reading pulses and dividing and counting and displaying the result on an array of common-cathode 7-segment numerical LEDs.
Then I'm sure someone else will convert their Nixie clock to give a more classic counter readout look, instead of the LEDs.
Someone else will of course program a microcontroller to do the whole thing with minimal components and negligible unit cost, using parts so small you need a microscope to see them.
But it's only an easy exercise to write a Python app to read the scope over the LAN or USB, dump the data into a spreadsheet, then compute and show the RPM (and duty cycle, phase, maximum dynamic pressure, whatever) on your laptop.
Then some old codger will break out the GenRad Strobotac and show us how it used to be done...
Or you could just grab the old pocket calculator...