Yardages.
Front, center, and back of every green. Distances to bunkers, water, and where to lay up. Adjusted for elevation and wind, on by default — the number you read is the number you play.
A golf companion · forthcoming
Distance to the front, center, and back of every green. Distances to hazards and layup targets. A private record of your rounds. Built for the player who would rather think about the shot than the screen.
An invitation
Most golf apps want to be social networks, lesson stores, and tee-time brokers. They lean on leaderboards, ad inventory, and annual subscriptions to do it.
We are building the opposite: a single, considered tool for the round itself.
Pick what fits — both go to a quick form.
A note from the workshop
I got tired of paying eighty dollars a year for a golf app that still served me ads. So I built one that does one thing, does it well, and asks for nothing else.
Weston · founder · Pacific NorthwestThe program
Beginner-simple on day one, serious-tool by round three. Progressive disclosure does the work — the hole screen stays glanceable; depth lives one tap below.
Front, center, and back of every green. Distances to bunkers, water, and where to lay up. Adjusted for elevation and wind, on by default — the number you read is the number you play.
Keep it as light or as detailed as you want — a stroke count per hole, or every shot tagged with the club and the yardage it carried. Stroke, Stableford, and match play.
Fairways, greens, putts, and how far you actually hit each club. Fill it in mid-round, fill it in afterward, or skip it entirely.
A library of the courses you actually play. Search and start a round in two taps.
An honest exchange
Most golf apps charge a yearly subscription using course data they got for free — and sell ads against your round on top. We're asking you to pay, once, a fair price for the work we put in. That's the whole arrangement.
Apply to beta test the build we're working on now, or wait for the polished release. Either's good.