Square Golf UK: Complete Guide to the Launch Monitor, Omni and Simulator Setup

Square Golf UK: Complete Guide to the Launch Monitor, Omni and Simulator Setup

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Square Golf has quickly become one of the most interesting names in affordable launch monitors and home golf simulation.

The brand focuses on making simulator golf more accessible to everyday golfers who want realistic practice, useful shot data and proper course play at home without immediately stepping into five-figure simulator pricing.

That is why Square Golf has gained so much attention. The core Home Launch Monitor combines camera-based tracking, simulator software, club and ball data, and a setup that sits right beside the ball rather than several feet behind the player.

This guide explains what Square Golf is, how the Home Launch Monitor and Omni fit together, what the software includes, how the system compares with other popular launch monitors and who the range makes the most sense for.

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Square Golf launch monitor and home simulator overview with launch monitor, hitting mat and screen

Square Golf launch monitor. Image credit: Square Golf

This article forms part of the Outtabounds Square Golf Series.

What Is Square Golf?

Square Golf launch monitor and home simulator overview with launch monitor, hitting mat and screen

Square Golf brand hitting net. Image credit: Square Golf

Square Golf is a golf technology brand built around launch monitor hardware and simulator software for indoor practice and play. The official site positions the system as an easy-to-set-up home golf solution with realistic 3D courses, practice modes and instant ball and club feedback.

The main reason golfers are drawn to Square Golf is value. The standard Square Golf Launch Monitor sits at a price point that makes home simulation feel far more achievable than premium studio systems, while still offering spin, launch, carry and club metrics that are useful for real practice.

The company has also built an ecosystem around the hardware rather than selling a device on its own. You are buying into simulator modes, range practice, data screens, course play, credits-based gameplay and external integrations like GSPro and E6 Connect.

That broader ecosystem matters because many golfers do not just want a gadget that spits out numbers. They want something that helps them practise more often, enjoy the game more at home and justify setting aside space for a proper simulator build.

If you want an overview focused purely on the value of the core device, go to: Square Golf Launch Monitor Review: Is It Worth It for Home Golf?

The Two Main Devices: Home Launch Monitor and Omni

Square Golf Home Launch Monitor and Square Golf Omni launch monitor side by side

Square Golf Omni launch monitor. Image credit: Square Golf.

At the centre of the series are two main hardware products. The first is the standard Home Launch Monitor, which is the model most golfers mean when they simply say Square Golf. This is the compact side-mounted unit designed mainly for indoor simulator use.

The second is the newer Square Golf Omni Launch Monitor. On the official product page, Square Golf describes Omni as a more advanced model with four-camera infrared tracking, a built-in display, a larger hitting area and no requirement for marked balls. It is also positioned for indoor and outdoor use, which broadens the appeal significantly for golfers who want one device for home practice and range work.

That split is important. The Home Launch Monitor is the obvious entry point if your goal is an indoor simulator room or net setup with strong value for money. The Omni is the step-up option if you want more flexibility, more convenience and a higher-end experience.

In simple terms, the standard unit is the model that makes Square Golf accessible. The Omni is the model that shows where the platform can go as the brand moves further into the serious simulator market.

If you want a deeper look at the newer model, go to: Square Golf Omni Launch Monitor: What Is New and Who Is It For?

How The Standard Square Golf Launch Monitor Works

Square Golf launch monitor next to a golf ball on a hitting mat

Square Golf Omni launch monitor. Image credit: Square Golf.

The standard Square Golf unit uses a high-speed camera system and machine vision to capture what happens at impact. Because the device sits right beside the ball, it looks directly across the hitting zone rather than trying to read the shot from several metres behind the player.

That side-on design is one of the reasons the product has become so popular in smaller home simulator spaces. You do not need the same amount of ball flight room behind the golfer that some radar-based units prefer, and the device can fit neatly into indoor bays where space is limited.

Square Golf says the unit captures both ball and club data. On the software side, ball data includes metrics such as ball speed, direction, launch angle, spin, apex, carry, run and total distance. Club data can also be measured when the included club marker or shaft tape is used, with metrics such as swing path, face angle, dynamic loft and angle of attack shown in data mode.

There is also a practical detail many buyers miss: the system can work with normal golf balls, but Square Golf says its dotted balls improve precision. That gives golfers flexibility. You can get started with normal balls, but use the supplied marked balls when you want the best possible spin reading from the platform.

If you want the tracking technology explained in more detail, go to: How Does Square Golf Work? Camera Tracking, Ball Data and Club Data Explained

Why The Square Golf Launch Monitor Has Become So Popular

Golfer using Square Golf launch monitor in a home simulator room

Golfer using Square Golf launch monitor in a home simulator room. Image credit: Square Golf

Independent reviews have played a major role in Square Golf's rise. Golf Monthly praised the system's value for money, shot response time and the ease of setup, while Golf Insider UK reported strong accuracy for several key iron metrics and described the system as very compelling for the price.

That kind of feedback matters because budget launch monitors often involve a compromise somewhere. Sometimes the hardware is affordable but the simulator experience feels basic. Sometimes the app is appealing but the data is not reliable enough to trust. Sometimes the technology is good, but the subscription model becomes expensive over time.

Square Golf has gained traction because it feels more complete than many golfers expect at the price. You are not just buying a range screen. You are buying a system that supports practice modes, course play, credits, simulator integrations and enough data to make indoor practice feel purposeful.

For a lot of golfers, that is the sweet spot. They do not necessarily need tour fitting precision. They need a launch monitor that is enjoyable, responsive and accurate enough to help them practise intelligently and enjoy simulator golf at home.

If you want the full verdict-style breakdown, go to: Square Golf Launch Monitor Review: Is It Worth It for Home Golf?

Software, Courses and Practice Modes

Square Golf software screens showing range mode, data mode and simulator courses

Square Golf software screens showing range mode, data mode and simulator courses. Image credit: Square Golf

One of the strengths of Square Golf is that the software offering is broad enough to suit different types of golfer. The official software page highlights a realistic driving range, a data mode, closest-to-the-pin practice, putting practice and game or multi-game course play.

The driving range gives immediate feedback in a visual environment, which is ideal for simple ball striking practice. Data mode strips things back and focuses on the numbers, which is often the better choice when you are trying to understand club delivery or compare swings. Closest to the pin adds a target-based challenge that makes distance control practice more engaging, while putting practice helps the system feel more complete than launch monitors that mostly ignore the short game.

Then there is the course side. Square Golf includes welcome credits and uses a pay-as-you-play model rather than a compulsory monthly subscription. According to the official pricing page, 1,000 credits are included and that is enough for more than 55 rounds for one player. For golfers who are wary of another subscription, that pricing model is one of Square Golf's clearest advantages.

The brand also supports wider simulator software. Square Golf promotes GSPro integration with 500+ user-created courses and also highlights compatibility with E6 Connect. That gives the platform more life because golfers can start with the native software and then expand into other simulator ecosystems as their setup grows.

If you want a guide focused on simulator play and software, go to: Square Golf Software, Courses and GSPro: What Can You Actually Do?

Square Golf Setup: What You Need To Know Before Buying

Square Golf launch monitor lined up on an indoor hitting mat beside the golf ball

Square Golf launch monitor lined up on an indoor hitting mat beside the golf ball. Image credit: Square Golf.

The most important setup point is that Square Golf is designed to sit level with the golf ball and work in controlled indoor lighting. On the official support pages, Square Golf advises users to avoid direct sunlight and minimise interference from other infrared light sources. It also notes that the mat colour should contrast clearly with the golf ball and that the ball needs to sit within the ready area.

That tells you exactly what kind of environment Square Golf likes best: an indoor hitting bay, garage simulator, spare room or studio where lighting and placement can be controlled consistently. This is one reason the product has such strong appeal for home simulators. It is not just portable technology for the range. It is a system that seems happiest in a permanent or semi-permanent indoor practice setup.

The practical questions then become simple. Do you have room for the golfer to swing freely? Can you create a safe hitting area with net or screen protection? Can you keep the launch monitor level with the ball? And can you keep harsh sunlight or reflective clutter away from the camera view?

If the answer is yes, Square Golf starts to make a lot of sense. If not, you may need to think more carefully about your room, your lighting and how permanent you want the setup to be.

If you want a step-by-step buying and positioning guide, go to: Square Golf Setup Guide: Room Size, Ball Position and Indoor Tips

Who Square Golf Is Best For

Golfer practising with Square Golf in a compact home simulator bay

Golfer practising with Square Golf in a compact home simulator bay. Image credit: Square Golf.

Square Golf makes the most sense for golfers who want more than a swing toy but less than a commercial fitting studio. If you want real ball and club feedback, home simulator golf, useful practice modes and a price that still feels realistic for a serious hobby purchase, this is exactly the territory Square Golf targets.

It is particularly well suited to golfers building a first simulator room. The side-mounted design, credits-based course model and solid software range make it feel less intimidating than some more expensive ecosystems. It is also a good fit for players who enjoy structured range work and want to hit balls at home with feedback that is more useful than simply watching the net shake.

The Omni broadens the audience further. Golfers who want indoor and outdoor flexibility, a larger hitting zone and less dependency on marked balls may find the Omni far more attractive than the original unit, especially if they already know they are serious about launch monitor practice.

On the other hand, golfers who need ultra-portable range use, absolute fitting-grade precision or a system that can be used casually in all lighting conditions may prefer to compare Square Golf carefully against other categories before buying.

If you want that decision broken down by golfer type, go to: Who Should Buy Square Golf? Best For Home Simulators, Practice and Value

Square Golf vs Other Popular Launch Monitors

Square Golf compared with other launch monitors in a home practice setup

Square Golf compared with other launch monitors in a home practice setup. Image credit: Sky Trak.

Most buyers do not look at Square Golf in isolation. They are usually comparing it against something like the Garmin R10, SkyTrak or Rapsodo MLM2Pro. That is a useful comparison because those products sit around the same broader conversation: launch monitors that aim to bring meaningful data and simulator golf to everyday players without stepping all the way up to the premium end of the market.

Square Golf's strongest arguments are indoor friendliness, simulator feel, software breadth and the overall sense of value. The R10 appeals because it is small and portable, but many golfers still prefer camera-based systems for indoor use. SkyTrak has strong brand recognition and a dedicated indoor audience, but the total cost conversation can look different once subscriptions and ecosystem choices come into play. MLM2Pro is attractive on data and features, yet the best fit depends heavily on whether your priority is home simulation, range practice or all-round portability.

That is why there is no single winner for everybody. The right choice depends on whether you care most about indoor setup, ease of use, pricing model, practice depth or long-term simulator expansion.

If you want that comparison broken out properly, go to: Square Golf vs Garmin R10, SkyTrak and MLM2Pro: Which Launch Monitor Fits Best?

Building A Better Square Golf Setup With Accessories

Square Golf launch monitor with protective case and simulator bay protection

Square Golf accessories image slot. Replace with a hosted image featuring the unit with protective accessories in a simulator bay.

Once golfers commit to a simulator bay, protection becomes part of the conversation. A launch monitor that sits close to the ball is exposed to the realities of mishits, ricochets and the general wear of a busy hitting area.

That is why accessories can be genuinely useful rather than just add-ons. If you are building a permanent or semi-permanent setup, products like the Square Golf Protective Case and the Square Golf Ironclad Protector can make sense as part of the overall installation. They are not the reason to buy Square Golf, but they can be the reason your launch monitor lasts longer and feels more secure in regular use.

The same is true of the hardware choice itself. Some golfers will be perfectly happy with the standard Square Golf Launch Monitor. Others will decide that the broader capability of the Square Golf Omni is worth paying more for from the start.

That is one of the reasons this series matters. Square Golf is not just one product. It is now a small ecosystem, and the right buying decision depends on how you want the whole setup to work together.

If you want the simulator-build angle, go to: Square Golf Home Simulator Guide: Launch Monitor, Enclosure and Protection Essentials

Is Square Golf Worth Serious Consideration?

Golfer playing a simulated golf course using Square Golf at home

Square Golf simulator course using GSPro. Image credit: Square Golf.

For many golfers, yes. Square Golf sits in one of the most interesting parts of the market because it offers a home-first simulator experience that feels much richer than entry-level practice gadgets, without immediately pushing buyers into the cost of a premium commercial simulator build.

The standard unit looks especially strong if you want indoor simulation and structured practice at sensible money. The Omni looks promising if you want the same platform philosophy with more flexibility and a more advanced feature set. The software range is good, the pricing model is refreshingly different and independent reviews suggest the experience is strong enough to satisfy the vast majority of home users.

That does not mean it is automatically the best choice for every golfer. But it absolutely means Square Golf deserves to be on the shortlist if you are building a home simulator, comparing launch monitors for indoor use or trying to get more meaningful practice out of the space you already have.

And that is ultimately why the brand has become so relevant. It makes simulator golf feel practical, enjoyable and achievable for more golfers than ever before.

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