flightscope mevo gen 2

FlightScope Mevo Gen 2 Review: Complete UK Buyer's Assessment

19 min read
FlightScope Mevo Gen 2 launch monitor in a premium UK home golf simulator setup
FlightScope Mevo Gen 2 launch monitor in a premium UK home golf simulator setup

The FlightScope Mevo Gen 2 sits in a sweet spot that very few launch monitors occupy in the UK market: genuinely capable for indoor simulator use, excellent outdoors, full club data included as standard, and priced at £1,199 — roughly a third of what you'd pay for a camera-based alternative delivering comparable data. It's the monitor we sell more of than any other at Open Golfer, and this review explains exactly why — along with the honest downsides nobody else seems to mention.

This isn't a spec sheet rehash. We've tested the Mevo Gen 2 extensively in real UK simulator setups — garages, garden rooms, spare bedrooms — and on driving ranges across the Midlands. What follows is a practical, UK-specific assessment: what it does well, where it falls short, and who should (and shouldn't) buy one in 2026.

If you're still deciding between launch monitor types, our launch monitor comparison guide covers every monitor worth considering. If you've already decided on the Mevo Gen 2 and want to understand the full simulator build, start with our complete UK buyer's guide.

Quick Verdict: Should You Buy It?

In a sentence: the FlightScope Mevo Gen 2 is the best value launch monitor for UK home simulator builders who have at least 5 metres of room depth.

Buy the Mevo Gen 2 if:

  • You want indoor simulator use AND outdoor range/garden practice from one device
  • Your simulator room is at least 5m (16.4ft) deep
  • You want club data (club speed, attack angle, club path) included — not as a paid extra
  • Budget matters — the complete bundle starts at £2,498
  • You plan to use GSPro, E6 Connect, or Awesome Golf

Skip the Mevo Gen 2 if:

  • Your room is under 5m deep — you physically cannot fit a radar monitor behind the ball
  • Indoor spin accuracy is your absolute top priority (camera monitors like the Foresight GC3S measure spin directly)
  • You'll never use it outdoors and want the most compact indoor-only setup

Our rating: 8.5/10 — outstanding value, genuinely versatile, with the room depth requirement being the only significant limitation for UK buyers.

FlightScope Mevo Gen 2 Specifications

FlightScope Mevo Gen 2 specifications card showing key features and UK pricing
Specification Detail
Technology 3D Doppler radar
Placement 1.5–2.5m (5–8ft) behind the ball
Ball data Ball speed, launch angle, spin rate, spin axis, carry distance, total distance, apex height, descent angle, flight time
Club data (included) Club head speed, smash factor, angle of attack, club path
Indoor use Yes — metallic dot stickers recommended for improved spin accuracy
Outdoor use Yes — full ball flight tracking, no stickers required
Software included E6 Connect (5-course licence)
GSPro compatible Yes
E6 Connect compatible Yes (included)
Awesome Golf compatible Yes
Connectivity Wi-Fi, Bluetooth
Weight ~0.6 kg
Battery Rechargeable, approximately 5 hours
UK standalone price £1,199
UK bundle price From £2,498 (SimSpace enclosure, Platinum impact screen, hitting mat)

The spec sheet is impressive for the price. Nine ball data points and four club data points — all included as standard. At £1,199, no other monitor in the UK market gives you this breadth of data without charging extra for club metrics. The Foresight GC3S, for comparison, requires a paid upgrade for club head speed and club path.

How 3D Doppler Radar Actually Works

Understanding the technology helps explain both the Mevo Gen 2's strengths and its limitations. It's not magic — it's physics, and that physics comes with trade-offs.

The Mevo Gen 2 sits behind you on the ground, aimed in the direction of your target. It emits radio waves at a precise frequency. When those waves hit a moving object — your club head during the downswing, then the ball after impact — they bounce back at a slightly different frequency. That frequency shift (the Doppler effect, the same principle behind police speed cameras and weather radar) tells the unit exactly how fast the object is moving and in what direction.

Because the radar is positioned behind the ball, it can track both the club's approach and the ball's flight path continuously. This is fundamentally different from camera-based monitors like the Foresight GC3S or GC3, which photograph the ball at impact and then calculate what happens next. The Mevo Gen 2 watches the ball fly.

Outdoors, this means measured carry distance, total distance, apex height, and descent angle — not estimates from a physics model. The radar follows the ball from launch to landing. It's genuinely impressive to see on a driving range: hit a 7-iron, watch it fly, and the app shows you the actual trajectory and landing spot within seconds.

Indoors, however, the ball hits an impact screen roughly 3 metres after launch. The radar has only tracked a tiny fraction of the ball's intended flight, so it must rely more heavily on algorithms — FlightScope calls this Fusion Tracking — to calculate the full trajectory from limited data. This is where the indoor spin accuracy question comes in, which we'll address honestly in the next section.

Accuracy Assessment: The Honest Truth

FlightScope Mevo Gen 2 accuracy ratings chart for ball speed, spin rate, and carry distance

Accuracy conversations about launch monitors tend to descend into brand tribalism. Camera fans claim radar can't measure spin. Radar fans claim cameras can't track ball flight. The truth is more nuanced, and it depends on exactly which measurements you care about and where you're using the device.

Ball Speed: Excellent

Ball speed is the Mevo Gen 2's strongest measurement. Doppler radar measures velocity directly — it's what the technology was designed for. In our testing, the Mevo Gen 2's ball speed readings are consistently within 1 mph of a TrackMan 4 and within 1–2 mph of a Foresight GCQuad. For practical purposes, ball speed accuracy is a non-issue. Whether you're hitting driver at 150 mph ball speed or wedges at 80 mph, the readings are reliable.

Launch Angle: Very Good

Launch angle accuracy is strong, typically within 0.3–0.5 degrees of reference monitors in our testing. This is more than precise enough for practice, club fitting, and simulator play. You'll never notice a 0.3-degree launch angle discrepancy during a round of GSPro.

Spin Rate (Indoors): Good, With Caveats

Here's where honest reviewers separate from marketing material. Indoor spin measurement is the Mevo Gen 2's weakest link — not because the radar is bad, but because physics works against it.

When you hit a ball into a screen 3m away, the radar doesn't have enough flight data to fully characterise the spin. FlightScope's Fusion Tracking algorithm fills the gap using ball speed, launch angle, and the limited spin data captured in those first 3 metres. The result is spin readings that are good enough for practice and simulator play but less precise than what a camera monitor measures directly at impact.

In practical terms:

  • With metallic dot stickers: Indoor spin readings are typically within 200–400 rpm of a tour-grade reference monitor. If a GCQuad reads 5,200 rpm on a 7-iron, the Mevo Gen 2 with stickers might read 4,900–5,500 rpm. For simulator play and general practice trends, this is perfectly usable.
  • Without stickers: Spin accuracy drops further, particularly on lower-spinning shots (long irons, hybrids, woods). Driver spin can occasionally read unrealistically low or high. We strongly recommend always using stickers indoors.
  • Spin axis: Less precise than spin rate. The Mevo Gen 2 will correctly identify whether you hit a draw or fade and the general magnitude, but the exact spin axis reading (e.g., distinguishing between 5 degrees left and 8 degrees left) is less reliable than a camera monitor indoors.

Does this matter? For most home simulator users, no. If you're playing rounds on GSPro, practising with targets, and tracking general trends in your ball flight, the Mevo Gen 2's indoor spin accuracy is more than adequate. If you're a club fitter who needs precise spin axis data to recommend shaft profiles, or a tour-level player fine-tuning wedge spin rates, you'd want a camera-based monitor like the Foresight GC3S or GC3.

For a deeper look at what accuracy actually means for simulator users, see our article on how accurate golf simulators really are.

Spin Rate (Outdoors): Excellent

Outdoors, the story changes completely. With a full ball flight to track, the radar can measure spin through the trajectory — how the ball curves, how steeply it descends, how far it carries versus rolls. Outdoor spin accuracy is genuinely excellent and competitive with monitors costing two or three times more. This is where radar technology shines.

Carry and Total Distance: Very Good to Excellent

Indoors, carry and total distance are calculated from launch conditions using physics models — both the Mevo Gen 2 and camera monitors do this identically, since no indoor monitor can track a ball past the impact screen. The calculations are very good, typically within 2–3 yards of outdoor measured carry.

Outdoors, carry and total distance become directly measured rather than calculated. This is a significant advantage over camera monitors, which can only estimate outdoor distances from launch data.

Club Data: Good, and Included

Club head speed, smash factor, angle of attack, and club path are all measured by the radar tracking your club head through the downswing. Accuracy is good — club speed typically within 1–2 mph of reference monitors, and angle of attack within about 1 degree. The key selling point isn't that the club data is the most precise available; it's that it's included at no extra cost. Many competing monitors either don't offer club data or charge hundreds of pounds for it.

Accuracy Summary Table

Measurement Indoor Rating Outdoor Rating Notes
Ball speed Excellent Excellent Doppler radar's core strength
Launch angle Very Good Excellent Within 0.3–0.5° of reference
Spin rate Good (with stickers) Excellent Indoor limitation due to short flight
Spin axis Adequate Very Good Correctly reads draw/fade; less precise indoors
Carry distance Very Good (calculated) Excellent (measured) Indoor values are modelled, outdoor are tracked
Club head speed Good Good Included — no upgrade fee
Angle of attack Good Good Within ~1° of reference
Club path Good Good Correctly reads in-to-out vs out-to-in

Setup and Daily Use

Overhead view of FlightScope Mevo Gen 2 placement behind the ball in a golf simulator

Initial Setup

Out of the box, the Mevo Gen 2 requires minimal setup. Download the FlightScope Mevo app on your phone or tablet, create an account, and pair the device via Bluetooth. Firmware updates happen wirelessly through the app — FlightScope pushes updates regularly, and they've genuinely improved accuracy and reliability since launch.

For simulator use, you'll also need to connect the Mevo Gen 2 to your PC or Mac. It creates its own Wi-Fi network that your computer connects to, then bridges data to your chosen simulator software (GSPro, E6 Connect, or Awesome Golf). The initial software connection can take a few minutes to figure out the first time, but once configured it reconnects automatically.

Physical Placement

The Mevo Gen 2 sits on the ground (or a low tripod, which is included) 1.5–2.5m behind where the ball sits. It must be aimed directly at your target — in a simulator setup, that means pointed at the centre of your impact screen.

Two practical tips from real-world UK simulator builds:

  • Mark the spot. Use a small piece of gaffer tape on the floor to mark the exact position and angle. This turns setup from a 5-minute alignment exercise into a 10-second placement.
  • Height matters. Floor level or just slightly elevated (the included tripod is perfect). Too high and the radar angle changes, affecting readings. Don't put it on a shelf or table.

Metallic Dot Stickers

For indoor use, we strongly recommend applying metallic dot stickers to your practice balls. These are small reflective dots that you stick onto the ball's surface — they give the radar a more reflective target to track, significantly improving indoor spin accuracy.

FlightScope includes a starter sheet of stickers in the box, and replacement sheets cost a few pounds. One sticker per ball, and they survive multiple impacts before needing replacement. It's a minor inconvenience — perhaps 5 seconds per ball — but the spin data improvement is worth it.

Outdoors, stickers aren't required. The full ball flight gives the radar enough data to characterise spin without them.

Software Connection for Simulator Use

The Mevo Gen 2 connects to the three most popular simulator software platforms in the UK:

  • GSPro: Connection via the GSPro Connect app. Reliable, well-documented, and the setup most UK simulator owners use. GSPro costs roughly £200/year for premium (200+ courses) or £8/month for basic.
  • E6 Connect: 5-course licence included with the Mevo Gen 2. Direct connection, no additional software needed. E6 Connect has excellent graphics and runs smoothly. Additional courses available as purchases.
  • Awesome Golf: Direct connection supported. A newer platform gaining popularity in the UK market with a strong course library.

For a detailed comparison of which software suits different users, read our software comparison guide.

Day-to-Day Reliability

After the initial setup, daily use is straightforward. Power on the Mevo Gen 2 (it takes about 30 seconds to boot), open your simulator software, and the connection re-establishes automatically in most cases. The rechargeable battery lasts approximately 5 hours — more than enough for an evening session. Most simulator owners leave a USB-C cable plugged in permanently so it's always charged.

Occasional niggles we've experienced: the Wi-Fi connection sometimes drops if your home network is congested (the Mevo Gen 2 creates its own network on the same frequency bands). Restarting the unit resolves this in seconds. FlightScope's firmware updates have reduced connection issues substantially over the past year.

Indoor Simulator Performance

This is where most UK buyers will use the Mevo Gen 2 — inside a SimSpace enclosure (or similar), hitting into a Platinum impact screen, with a projector displaying GSPro or E6 Connect. Here's what to expect.

Space Requirements

The non-negotiable: your room must be at least 5 metres (16.4 feet) deep. Here's the maths:

  • 1.5–2m behind the ball for the Mevo Gen 2 (2m is ideal)
  • The hitting position (where you stand)
  • 3m from you to the impact screen (minimum comfortable distance)

In a 5m room, that's tight but workable — 2m radar distance, your hitting position, 3m to the screen. In a 5.5m+ room, you have comfortable margins. Below 5m, a radar monitor becomes impractical and you should look at camera-based alternatives like the Foresight GC3S (from £5,289 as a bundle) which sits beside the ball and needs zero rear space.

For detailed room planning, including width and ceiling height requirements, see our room size guide.

Simulator Software Experience

Playing GSPro with the Mevo Gen 2 is genuinely enjoyable. Shot detection is fast (typically under 2 seconds after impact), ball flights look realistic, and the data feeds through cleanly. The included club data means GSPro can display your club speed and attack angle alongside the ball flight, which adds real training value to every round.

E6 Connect, with 5 courses included free, offers a polished alternative. The graphics are arguably smoother than GSPro, and the included courses (Pebble Beach, St Andrews, and others) are well-rendered. For casual play and entertaining guests, E6 Connect feels more accessible.

The shot-to-shot cycle indoors is roughly: hit → 1.5 seconds data capture → ball flight displays on screen → retrieve ball → place new ball (with sticker) → hit again. In practice, you settle into a rhythm that feels natural within your first session.

Where Indoor Performance Could Be Better

Honesty requires mentioning the imperfections:

  • Occasional misreads: Perhaps 1 in 30–40 shots indoors, the Mevo Gen 2 will produce a reading that's clearly wrong — a 7-iron showing 2,000 rpm spin or a driver reading a 30-degree launch angle. These are easy to spot and you simply re-hit. It's an annoyance, not a dealbreaker, but camera monitors tend to produce fewer obvious misreads.
  • Short chip and pitch shots: Very low club speeds (below about 50 mph) can be inconsistently detected indoors. If you practice a lot of greenside chips in your simulator, be aware that the radar needs a minimum impact velocity to register reliably. Full swings are never an issue.
  • Putting: The Mevo Gen 2 does not track putting. If you want putting in your simulator, you'll need a separate putting system. This isn't a Mevo Gen 2 limitation specifically — most radar and camera monitors at this price point don't track putts reliably.

Outdoor Performance

If the indoor performance is "very good with caveats," the outdoor performance is simply excellent. This is where 3D Doppler radar technology truly shines, and it's the Mevo Gen 2's most compelling advantage over camera-based competitors.

Driving Range Use

Set the Mevo Gen 2 on the ground behind your bay, connect your phone, and you have a personal TrackMan-lite for every range session. Every shot gets full ball flight data: carry, total, apex, descent angle, spin, and club data. The app displays shot trails, averages, and session statistics. It transforms a mindless bucket of balls into structured practice.

Accuracy outdoors is a step up from indoor readings because the radar can track the complete ball flight. Carry distances are measured, not calculated. Spin is characterised from the actual trajectory. The data you see is what actually happened, not what a physics model predicts.

Garden Practice

Many UK customers use the Mevo Gen 2 with a practice net in the garden during warmer months. Even into a net (where the ball doesn't fly freely), the radar captures enough initial flight data to give useful feedback on ball speed, launch angle, and club metrics. Spin data into a net is less reliable than into open air, but it's still a meaningful practice tool.

For full outdoor tracking — watching the ball fly in a field or on a range — the Mevo Gen 2 is genuinely in the same category as monitors costing £5,000+. The 3D Doppler radar measures the same physics as a TrackMan, just with a slightly smaller radar unit and correspondingly slightly less precision at extreme ranges.

Portability

At roughly 0.6 kg with a rechargeable battery lasting approximately 5 hours, the Mevo Gen 2 is designed to travel. It fits in a golf bag pocket, needs no external power, and takes under a minute to set up outdoors. This portability is a genuine lifestyle benefit that camera monitors like the GC3S can't match in practical terms — the GC3S can go outdoors, but its camera-based design means it can't track ball flight, making it far less useful on a range.

What's in the Box and Bundle Options

Standalone Purchase (£1,199)

The FlightScope Mevo Gen 2 standalone includes:

  • Mevo Gen 2 radar unit
  • USB-C charging cable
  • Low tripod/stand
  • Metallic dot sticker sheet (starter pack)
  • E6 Connect 5-course licence
  • Carry pouch

This is the right purchase if you already have an enclosure, screen, and mat — or if you plan to use the Mevo Gen 2 outdoors only (range/garden) before building a full simulator later.

Complete Simulator Bundle (From £2,498)

The FlightScope Mevo Gen 2 Bundle includes everything you need for a complete indoor simulator setup:

  • FlightScope Mevo Gen 2 radar unit (with all standalone accessories)
  • SimSpace enclosure (steel frame, premium velour-lined interior panels)
  • Platinum triple-layer impact screen
  • Hitting mat
  • All mounting hardware and installation guide

The bundle represents genuine value. Buying the components separately would cost more, and you get the assurance that everything is compatible and tested together. The SimSpace enclosure is a premium build — dark steel frame, velour-lined interior panels for sound dampening, foam-padded frame edges for safety, and the Platinum impact screen is one of the best on the market for image quality and ball return.

You'll still need a projector (from roughly £400 for a short-throw model suitable for simulator use) and simulator software (E6 Connect is included; GSPro is the most popular upgrade at ~£200/year). Add a computer or laptop capable of running the software, and your total all-in cost is typically £3,200–£3,500.

How It Compares to the Competition

Context matters. The Mevo Gen 2 doesn't exist in isolation — here's how it stacks up against the monitors UK buyers most often compare it to.

vs Garmin Approach R10 (~£550)

The Garmin R10 is the budget entry point for radar-based launch monitors. It costs less than half the Mevo Gen 2 and shares the same Doppler radar principle. However, the R10 has notably less accurate spin data, fewer data points, and a less reliable indoor experience. For outdoor range use and casual practice, the R10 is decent value. For a serious indoor simulator, the Mevo Gen 2's additional accuracy and data breadth justify the price step-up.

vs SkyTrak+ (~£1,800–£2,200)

The SkyTrak+ uses photometric (camera-based) technology, sitting beside the ball like the Foresight range. It offers very good indoor spin accuracy and doesn't need space behind the ball. At roughly £600–£1,000 more than the Mevo Gen 2 standalone, the SkyTrak+ is the main camera-based competitor at a similar-ish price point. Choose the SkyTrak+ if your room is under 5m deep and indoor-only use is planned. Choose the Mevo Gen 2 if you want outdoor versatility, included club data, and the lower price.

vs Foresight GC3S (~£3,500–£4,000 standalone)

The GC3S is the accuracy benchmark in the mid-range. Its three cameras produce the most precise indoor spin data available below the GCQuad/TrackMan tier. But it costs roughly three times the Mevo Gen 2 standalone, and the GC3S bundle starts at £5,289 versus £2,498 for the Mevo Gen 2 bundle. For a detailed head-to-head, we've written a full launch monitor comparison covering both models extensively.

Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Excellent value at £1,199 standalone / £2,498 bundle Requires 5m+ room depth for indoor simulator use
Full club data included (speed, attack angle, path, smash factor) Indoor spin accuracy below camera monitors (esp. without stickers)
Outstanding outdoor ball flight tracking Occasional misreads (~1 in 30–40 shots indoors)
Portable — 0.6 kg, rechargeable 5-hour battery Short chips/pitches not always detected reliably
Works with GSPro, E6 Connect (included), Awesome Golf No putting capability
E6 Connect 5-course licence included free Wi-Fi connection can drop on congested home networks
Regular firmware updates improving performance Spin axis data less precise indoors than outdoors
One device for indoor winter + outdoor summer use Needs metallic dot stickers for best indoor spin data

Who Should Buy the FlightScope Mevo Gen 2

Perfect For:

  • UK home simulator builders with 5m+ rooms — double garages, large garden rooms, dedicated sim rooms, or any space with adequate depth
  • Golfers who want year-round use — indoor simulator in winter, outdoor range/garden in summer, one device for both
  • Value-conscious buyers — the complete bundle at £2,498 is the most affordable route to a genuine, full-featured home simulator in the UK
  • Practice-focused golfers — club data (attack angle, club path, smash factor) is included, giving you swing metrics alongside ball flight for every shot
  • GSPro enthusiasts — seamless connection, fast shot detection, and the data breadth to make GSPro's features come alive
  • First-time simulator buyers — lower cost of entry, outdoor fallback value if you sell the enclosure later, and a monitor that grows with your setup

Not Ideal For:

  • Tight rooms under 5m deep — physically cannot accommodate the radar's rear placement. Look at the GC3S bundle instead
  • Club fitters needing precise spin axis data — camera monitors measure spin directly; the Mevo Gen 2 infers it
  • Golfers who only practise short game indoors — chipping and pitching detection is inconsistent at very low club speeds
  • Anyone who will never take the monitor outdoors — the outdoor versatility is the Mevo Gen 2's biggest advantage; if you'll never use it, you're paying for capability you won't exploit (though the price is still competitive)

Final Verdict: 8.5/10

FlightScope Mevo Gen 2 indoor and outdoor versatility split image showing both use cases

The FlightScope Mevo Gen 2 is, for most UK golfers building a home simulator in 2026, the smartest launch monitor purchase available. At £1,199 standalone or £2,498 as a complete bundle, it delivers a level of data, versatility, and build quality that was simply unavailable at this price two years ago.

It's not perfect. The 5-metre room depth requirement will rule it out for some UK garages and spare rooms — and that's a genuine limitation, not a minor footnote. Indoor spin accuracy, while good, trails what camera monitors achieve. The occasional misread indoors, while rare, breaks the rhythm of a practice session.

But the strengths are compelling. Included club data that competitors charge extra for. Outstanding outdoor performance that turns your launch monitor into a year-round training tool. A price point that leaves budget for a proper projector, premium mat, and a year of GSPro. And the backing of FlightScope — a company with decades of radar expertise whose firmware updates have measurably improved the Mevo Gen 2 since launch.

If your room fits it, the Mevo Gen 2 fits your game. It's the launch monitor we'd recommend to a friend who asked "what should I buy for my first simulator?" — and that's the most honest endorsement we can give.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the FlightScope Mevo Gen 2 accurate enough for a home golf simulator?

Yes, for the vast majority of home simulator users. Ball speed and launch angle accuracy are excellent — on par with monitors costing significantly more. Indoor spin accuracy is good with metallic dot stickers, typically within 200–400 rpm of reference monitors. For playing rounds on GSPro or E6 Connect, practising with targets, and tracking game improvement trends, the accuracy is more than sufficient. It's only if you need precise spin axis data for club fitting that you'd want to step up to a camera-based monitor.

How much space do I need behind the ball for the Mevo Gen 2?

FlightScope recommends 1.5–2.5 metres behind the ball. In practice, 2 metres works well and gives reliable readings. This means your total room depth should be at least 5 metres to accommodate the radar behind you, your hitting position, and 3 metres to the impact screen. Rooms under 5m deep cannot realistically use a radar-based monitor — see our room size guide for alternative layouts.

Do I need metallic dot stickers for indoor use?

Strongly recommended, though not strictly required. Without stickers, the Mevo Gen 2 still measures ball speed, launch angle, and club data accurately. Spin data without stickers is less reliable — you may see more variation between shots and occasional readings that don't match what you felt. With stickers, indoor spin accuracy improves significantly. Stickers cost a few pounds per sheet and take seconds to apply. We consider them essential for serious indoor simulator use.

Can the Mevo Gen 2 work with GSPro?

Yes, seamlessly. GSPro is the most popular simulator software among UK Mevo Gen 2 owners. Connection is handled through the GSPro Connect app, and once set up it reconnects automatically each session. All ball and club data points feed through correctly. Our software comparison guide covers GSPro setup and alternatives in detail.

How does the Mevo Gen 2 compare to the original Mevo+?

The Mevo Gen 2 is a meaningful upgrade over the original Mevo+. Key improvements include faster shot processing, more reliable indoor readings (improved Fusion Tracking algorithm), better Wi-Fi connectivity, longer battery life, and a more compact form factor. If you're choosing between a discounted Mevo+ and the Mevo Gen 2, the Gen 2 is worth the upgrade — the indoor accuracy improvements alone justify it for simulator use.

Is the Mevo Gen 2 bundle worth it, or should I buy components separately?

The bundle at £2,498 represents genuine savings over buying each component individually. You get the monitor, a SimSpace enclosure with premium velour-lined interior, Platinum impact screen, and a hitting mat — all tested as a compatible system. Buying separately might save a few pounds if you source budget alternatives for the enclosure or mat, but you lose the quality assurance and the convenience. For most buyers, the bundle is the straightforward smart choice.

What else do I need to complete my simulator besides the bundle?

The bundle includes the launch monitor, enclosure, impact screen, and mat. To complete your simulator you'll need: a projector (budget from ~£400 for a suitable short-throw model), a computer or laptop capable of running simulator software (a mid-range gaming PC or laptop with a dedicated GPU), and simulator software (E6 Connect's 5-course licence is included; GSPro at ~£200/year is the most popular upgrade). Optional extras include a projector mount, HDMI cable, surround sound speakers, and room treatment for acoustics. Budget roughly £3,200–£3,500 all-in for a complete, quality setup.

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OpenGolfer
Golf simulator expert at OpenGolfer. Helping golfers build their perfect indoor setup.

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