Full Swing KIT Finally Gets GSPro
Here's What Changes
Full Swing KIT — the $4,999 launch monitor Tiger Woods uses — now has native GSPro integration. Previously locked to Full Swing's own software ecosystem, K.
The Short Answer
Full Swing KIT — the $4,999 launch monitor Tiger Woods uses — now has native GSPro integration. Previously locked to Full Swing's own software ecosystem, K.
Ace
Home Golf Hero
Here’s a sentence I didn’t expect to write today: the Full Swing KIT now works with GSPro.
If you’ve been following the KIT at all, you know this was the elephant in the room. The KIT is a $4,999 launch monitor. Tiger Woods uses it. It’s on Tour. It delivers sixteen data points with no subscription, and the hardware is rock solid. But it was locked to Full Swing’s own software ecosystem — FSX Pro, FSX Play, and the new Skill Strike gaming platform. If you wanted to play the 550+ courses on GSPro, you were out of luck.
Not anymore.
What Changed
Full Swing and GSPro announced a native integration on July 5, 2026. No third-party connectors. No hacky workarounds. No voiding your warranty by running a community-built adapter. It’s a direct software update.
If you already own a KIT, you update the firmware, download the GSPro connector from the Full Swing app, and you’re in. The data flows natively — club head speed, ball speed, launch angle, spin axis, carry distance, the whole 16-point data set. GSPro interprets it the same way it interprets data from a GC3 or an Uneekor Eye Mini.
What This Means for KIT Owners
The KIT was already a good launch monitor. It’s accurate (camera + radar hybrid), portable (fits in a backpack), and has a zero-subscription model that’s rare at its price point. But the software lock-in was a dealbreaker for a lot of buyers.
GSPro is the most popular sim golf software for a reason. It has the best course library. The best graphics. The best online tournament scene. The best community course designer. If you’re building a home simulator and you’re not using GSPro, you’re either price-sensitive (Awesome Golf at $199/year) or you really need iPad compatibility (E6 Connect).
KIT owners now have access to all of that. The full GSPro catalog. The online leagues. The other 50,000 people who play GSPro in their garages every week.
What This Means for Full Swing
This is a signal. Full Swing has been on a launch spree this week — Skill Strike on July 3, Back Nine partnership on July 4, KIT Baseball on July 5, and now GSPro integration. That’s four announcements in three days. All of them point in the same direction: Full Swing is building an open ecosystem, not a walled garden.
The KIT was the last holdout. Their premium sim lineup (GC3, Pro Series) already has GSPro compatibility through the TGC 2019 connector. The KIT was the odd one out — a portable launch monitor with pro-grade data locked into mid-tier software. Now it’s not.
What This Means for Buyers
If you were on the fence about the KIT because of the software situation, your objection is gone.
The KIT at $4,999 competes with the GC3 ($5,249), the Uneekor Eye Mini ($3,499), and the Garmin R50 ($4,499). All three already had GSPro compatibility. The KIT was the only one in that tier that didn’t. Now it does.
The math gets interesting:
- Full Swing KIT ($4,999) — 16 data points, no subscription, GSPro compatible, portable
- GC3 ($5,249) — 15 data points, no subscription, GSPro compatible, less portable
- Uneekor Eye Mini ($3,499) — 15 data points, no subscription, GSPro compatible, less accurate outdoors
- Garmin R50 ($4,499) — 15 data points, no subscription, GSPro compatible, portable, GSPro subscription extra
The KIT was already a strong contender. With GSPro, it’s arguably the best all-around launch monitor under $5,000 for someone who wants Tour-level accuracy in a portable package.
The Catch
There’s one: you need a gaming PC to run GSPro. The KIT is a portable launch monitor — designed to go from your garage to the driving range to the course. But GSPro runs on a computer. If your whole thing is “I want an iPad-only setup,” GSPro isn’t for you regardless of the launch monitor.
Also worth knowing: the GSPro subscription is $250/year on top of the KIT. Full Swing’s own software (FSX Play) is included with the KIT at no extra cost. So you’re paying more for GSPro. But if you want the best course library and the best online community, it’s worth $250.
The KIT Just Got More Interesting
The KIT just became a much more interesting launch monitor. The software lock-in was its biggest weakness, and it’s gone. If you’re shopping in the $4,000-$5,000 range, the KIT deserves a serious look — especially if you value portability and Tour-level accuracy.
The Full Swing ecosystem play is getting clearer by the day. Hardware. Software. Gambling. Facilities. Cross-sport. They’re not just selling launch monitors anymore. They’re building the infrastructure of a sport that’s played indoors.
Read our full Full Swing KIT review — or see how the KIT stacks up in our best launch monitors roundup against the GC3 and every other competitor at this tier.
Source:PR NewswireRead original →
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