Release notes
Recent enhancements, polish, and fixes. We update this when something user-facing ships.
The Skins guide walks through winning a hole outright and how carryover stacks the pot, and the trip-checklist guide lays out everything a trip organizer needs to line up — dates, lodging, tee times, formats, and the settle-up most groups forget. Both join the existing guides on Wolf, Stableford, Vegas, and Bingo Bango Bongo.
A new guide explaining the side game that lets any handicap compete — the three positional points, why it equalizes the field, and how to run it with the group.
A new guide explains the Vegas (golf) game — combining two partners' scores, the birdie flip that swings the bet, and the house rules to settle first. Our guides now also emit How-To and FAQ structured data, so they're eligible for richer Google results.
New plain-English guides for Nassau, stroke play, scramble, match play, and best ball — including the difference between best ball and a scramble that everyone mixes up. The footer now links every guide we publish, not just a handful.
Previously, answering or dismissing the "Did this make the trip easier?" card on one trip's recap hid it on every future trip too. It now resets per trip, so you get a fresh ask after each trip.
Finished rounds lead with the winner and your finish, in-progress rounds say Resume, and upcoming ones say Plan — so a glance at the agenda tells you where each round stands.
When a side game is settled, a 'Side games' line explains the payout that moved your balance.
Adding a stay whose address Google doesn't recognize? Keep what you typed — it's saved and shows up on the trip agenda with a Navigate link, ready to add a pin later.
Track Bingo, Bango, and Bongo hole-by-hole — the first side game with its own points. Log who won each event right on the scoring screen, see the points band on the scorecard, and settle with prefilled amounts.
Run Vegas on a 2v2 round — your team's two scores form a number each hole, low team wins the difference, with optional birdie flips. The cash is computed straight from the scorecard; your captain just confirms and it settles to the money tab.
The Wolf and Stableford guides now end with a quick way to take the format live — score the round on one shared trip leaderboard, or organize the tee time and let everyone RSVP. The rules content is all still there.
Not sure which format fits your group? A new read-only advisor lives right on the round-setup screen — it explains our formats, side games, and team strategies in plain language, grounded in our own glossary.
The 'Send feedback' option on the More tab now opens a quick one-line form — a thumbs up or down, an optional sentence, and that's it. After a trip wraps, the recap also asks how it went. We read every one.
On narrow screens the "Your money" card's buy-in and net stats now stack one per row, so the labels and status chips stay readable instead of shattering.
On a phone, the line under a friend's name now wraps to a second line so you can see the full trip and date you last played together, instead of cutting off mid-name.
On narrow phones, a very long winner name (or an email-style fallback name) now wraps neatly inside the gold champion card instead of spilling past its edge.
On phones, pop-up messages now float above the bottom navigation instead of sitting on top of it, so all four tabs stay tappable — even when a sticky 'couldn't sync' message is showing.
The per-player handicap grid now stays inside the screen on phones — every input is reachable, and long names no longer push the layout off the edge.
Adding a stay now leads with the name of the place — "John's Parents," the lake house, or a hotel — with an optional address only if you want directions. And typing a course we can't match shows a clearer note about what stays off until you match it.
When Google can't find a place you're searching for — a dinner spot, a stay, a course — you can now keep exactly what you typed instead of hitting a dead end. The picker shows a clear "Use it as written" option and tells you what (if anything) you give up by skipping the match.
When a score changes on a team round after settle-up, the "scores changed" banner now names the team instead of just saying "Player".
Open a wrapped round and you land on who won and the standings — setup is tucked away, read-only. A new morning-after card on Today recaps yesterday's round, and the chip strip and agenda jump straight to the result.
When you start a scramble round where teams play one ball, each team now gets its own scorecard at tee time. That lights up team score entry on the scoring screen and keeps the leaderboard on team scores instead of falling back to individual gross.
After a round, the foursome captain can declare the skins, wolf, and nassau winners — and the cash lands straight in the money tab and settle-up, no separate ledger to keep.
New accounts now get a quick personalized hand-off straight into setting up your first tee time or trip.
Opens the same micro-form sheet