Full Swing Kit Review -- best suited for Indoor-first, software included. Available for ~$3,499. Skip it if need outdoor use or gspro.
The Full Swing KIT is a dual-camera floor-mounted monitor built primarily for indoor use. It's the monitor used in Tiger Woods' home simulator and seen in TGL (the indoor golf league on television). That association has driven significant awareness, and the KIT backs it up with solid accuracy and a clean indoor workflow.
What separates it from the SkyTrak Plus and Bushnell Launch Pro is the software bundle: FSX Play is included in the price, so there's no separate software subscription for the base simulator experience. Over 5 years that saves $750–$3,000 in subscription costs compared to monitors that charge annually. The trade-off is limited outdoor performance and a narrower software ecosystem than Foresight-based monitors.
Who should buy this
Buy this if
- Primarily indoor — no outdoor range use needed
- You want software included in the price (FSX Play)
- Budget is $3,000–$4,500 for the monitor
- Room is 12ft+ — camera works in short rooms
- Long-term cost matters — no annual software fee for base tier
Skip this if
- You need outdoor driving range use — poor outdoor performance
- You want GSPro as primary software — limited integration
- Software ecosystem flexibility matters
- Budget stretches to $6,499 — GC3 gives significantly better data
Plain English verdict
The KIT is a solid mid-range indoor monitor with a genuinely useful included software bundle. FSX Play is a good simulator platform with a decent course library, and having it included removes the ongoing annual subscription cost that makes the SkyTrak Plus and Bushnell LP more expensive over time.
The honest limitation is software ecosystem. Full Swing has fewer third-party software integrations than Foresight-based monitors, and GSPro — the most popular community platform — has limited support. If you're committed to the FSX Play ecosystem and want an indoor-only build at a mid-range price, the KIT is a strong choice. If software flexibility matters, the Bushnell Launch Pro gives more options at a similar price point.
Performance scores
- Ball data accuracy
- Club data accuracy
- Indoor consistency
- Software ecosystem
- Setup ease
- Value for money
Full specifications
| Technology | Dual high-speed cameras |
| Ball metrics | Ball speed, launch angle, launch direction, spin rate (measured), spin axis, carry, total, apex, curve |
| Club metrics | Club head speed, face angle, dynamic loft, attack angle, club path |
| Min room depth | 12ft — camera measures at impact |
| Outdoor use | Poor — designed for indoor use |
| Software included | FSX Play — full simulator, courses included |
| Compatible software | FSX Play (primary), limited third-party |
| Annual subscription | Included — FSX Play base tier at no extra cost |
| PC required | Yes — Windows PC |
| Where to buy | Full Swing direct, selected dealers |
| Warranty | 2 years limited |
Full Swing KIT vs Bushnell Launch Pro
| Feature | Full Swing KIT | Bushnell Launch Pro |
|---|---|---|
| Price | ~$3,499 | ~$3,499 |
| Technology | Dual camera | Foresight photometric |
| Club data | Good | Excellent (Foresight) |
| Software included | FSX Play (included) | E6 basic (2 courses) |
| Annual cost | $0 for base FSX Play | $150–$600/yr |
| Outdoor use | Poor | Good |
| Software flexibility | Limited | GSPro, E6, TGC, more |
| Verdict | Better long-term cost | Better data + flexibility |
Frequently asked questions
- Is FSX Play good simulator software?
- Yes — FSX Play is a polished simulator platform with good course graphics and solid ball flight physics. The included tier has a limited course library compared to GSPro's community library of 200,000+ courses, but it's a complete and functional simulator experience out of the box without any additional cost.
- Can it connect to GSPro?
- Full Swing and GSPro have had limited and inconsistent integration. Check the current status on both the GSPro and Full Swing support pages before buying if GSPro is a priority — this has changed multiple times and may differ from what's documented here.
- Why is it called the KIT?
- KIT stands for "Keep Improving Technology" — Full Swing's branding for their home simulator line. The technology is derived from the same dual-camera system used in Full Swing's commercial simulator installations.