a button, the app gives you a list of courses in the area with
the nearest displayed first, select this and it takes you to the
first hole where it displays an ariel view with yardages to and
from the pin.
Like the other apps in the test it allows you to drill down into
your game as much as you want to, it has required fields such
stokes, putts to be in filled in but if you want to add other
statistics including club selection, penalties etc. you can edit
these at the end of each hole
It currently has over 36,000 courses mapped, which is amazing
considering it’s still a fairly new product on the market. The
app doesn’t automatically detail the distance to the hazards,
only the pin, however the reticule can be taken to any point
where it details the yardage to that point. The yardages are
once again extremely good for a free piece of software,
usually within +/- 3 yards.
The system has an offline mode that is naturally reverts to if
the screen hasn’t been touched after a short period of time,
this means you have plenty of battery life left at the end of
your round so you can sit in the club house and Google video
golf tips.
GAME GOLF already has strategic partnerships with the Golf
Channel, The PGA of America and British PGA, It is in use in
104 countries it’s an all-round golfers app that offers the user
a host of information to analyse and examine, if however you
just want a quick, easy and accurate system to use then you
don’t need to look much further.
The Game Golf app is the baby brother of
its extremely impressive paid for system.
We couldn’t fault the system with the
£150 price tag, its desktop visuals and in
depth analysis of player’s game have been
enough to entice Tour players to use it in
their practice round at major events. The
good news is that this app allows you us
the same interface (although with less
features) making the system a fantasti