Takomo Golf Acquires Finnish Low-Torque Company Otso: Here’s What It Means
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Takomo Golf Acquires Finnish Low-Torque Company Otso: Here’s What It Means

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Takomo Golf Acquires Finnish Low-Torque Company Otso: Here’s What It Means

Takomo, the Finland-based direct-to-consumer golf brand, is announcing the acquisition of another Finnish golf company, Otso Golf, Ltd.

Sort of.

In an announcement released yesterday, Takomo says it is acquiring Otso Golf’s proprietary low-torque design, technology and business operations. What’s more, Otso founder and CEO Miika Farin is joining Takomo as its new senior product designer.

So why the “sort of?”

It’s complicated but the acquisition represents a massive step forward for Takomo.

Let’s dive in.

Otso Golf low torque putter

Takomo Golf + Otso = One step closer to full-bag

Takomo was founded in 2020 in Tuku, Finland by CEO Sebastian Haapahovi. It quickly gained traction as a maverick DTC brand offering sub-$500 iron sets. Takomo has earned a growing legion of fans and has expanded its offerings to include wedges and this year’s Ignis D1 driver.

The addition of Otso Golf’s low-torque putter technology is the logical next step in the brand’s growth plans.

“This acquisition represents a natural evolution of our mission to provide technologically advanced, beautifully designed equipment that golfers can actually afford,” said Haapahovi in a press statement. “As we continue our rapid growth, adding Otso’s innovative low-torque putters and design capabilities to our lineup allows us to deliver world-class Finnish craftsmanship and the putter technology golfers everywhere are asking for.”

The plan moving forward is for Farin to lead the development of a new, multi-model line of low-torque putters for Takomo. There’s no firm launch date set. All Takomo is saying is that it will be “in 2026.”

Why the “sort of?”

The reason we say Takomo Golf “sort of” acquired Otso is that Otso, on its website, says what Takomo is saying: Takomo has acquired the putter design and technology and Farin will be joining Takomo.

It also says Otso Golf will “continue on its own independent path, with new ideas already taking shape.”

If we can interpret, Takomo bought the technology and low-torque design, along with Farin and his know-how. Otso itself will continue as an independent entity. 

In the big picture, that’s probably nothing more than semantics, but it is interesting.

Earlier this year, Otso released its first small-batch, low-torque putter, the D1. It’s a compact mid-mallet CNC-milled from stainless steel. Interestingly, it’s also heel-shafted with a single-bend shaft.

 Interviewed last July by the Finnish golf website Golfpiste, Farin said he went heel-shafted for one simple reason: he liked the looks better.

“Center shaft hosel is not a natural model for me,” he told Golfpiste. “The same result can be achieved when the shaft points to the center of gravity of the blade.”

Based on the imagery we found on Instagram, Otso has created a low-torque putter that, to our eyes anyway, looks pretty good. At the very least, it’s a lot less hinky-looking than most of the low-torque/zero-torque models already on the market.  

What this means for Takomo Golf

Last summer, Takomo told MyGolfSpy its ultimate goal is to become a full-bag company. This acquisition is a giant step in that direction.

“We’re just now starting to get our feet into proprietary R&D, doing our own thing and inventing something new,” Takomo Golf Chief Marketing Officer Sean McCullum told us at the time. “That’s our future, and it’s something we hope to achieve here in the next year.”

It’s easy (and in many cases, not inaccurate) to dismiss lower-priced DTC brands as simply “open mold sellers.” Takomo will tell you it doesn’t have an army of engineers on staff but it does have an internal design team that does the initial designs and creates the cosmetics.  They’ll then work with their manufacturer in Taiwan on materials, face designs and other performance-related issues.

What, if anything, that evolution will mean to consumer pricing going forward is an open question. We’ll learn more once Takomo launches its new putter line as well as any other 2026 product launches that may be in the works.

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John Barba

John Barba

John Barba

John is an aging, yet avid golfer, writer, 6-point-something handicapper enjoying life in beautiful New Hampshire. He loves telling stories, writing about golf and golf travel, and enjoys classic golf equipment. “The only thing a golfer needs is more daylight.” - BenHogan

John Barba

John Barba

John Barba

Driver Callaway Elyte Triple Diamond Mini Driver TaylorMade R7 Quad Mini
Fairway Wilson Dynapower Carbon Irons Titleist T250/T350 Combo
Wedges Cleveland RTZ Putter Scotty Cameron Select Newport 3
Ball Titleist Pro V1x  
John Barba

John Barba

John Barba





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      HikingMike

      6 months ago

      I didn’t realize Takomo uses a manufacturer in Taiwan, interesting. Lots use manufacturers in China I believe.

      Reply

      CrashTestDummy

      6 months ago

      I thought this would happen given how popular Takomo is. The Otso putters look pretty good. It would be goodTakomo has a lot of options with different models and is priced like their irons.

      Reply

      ChristianR

      6 months ago

      Really curious to see what will happen to the prices of next generation clubs from Takomo, considering all the sponsored influencers and this acquisition and so on.

      Reply

      Fake

      6 months ago

      I’d be very interested in seeing a lower priced ZT model. Wouldn’t we all?

      Reply

      vito

      6 months ago

      Look for an original Tommy Armour ZAAP putter. It’s zero torque. I bought one 5 years ago for $20 on ebay. Since the zero torque “revolution” they’ve been harder to find and cost a bit more.

      Reply

      Fake

      6 months ago

      Thanks for the tip. I know Ram or Zebra made one a while back, too, and they sell for cheap.

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