We Tested A Year’s Worth Of Gear. Here’s What Mattered Most
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We Tested A Year’s Worth Of Gear. Here’s What Mattered Most

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We Tested A Year’s Worth Of Gear. Here’s What Mattered Most

Testing across categories for an entire year reveals patterns that are easy to miss when looking at individual rankings. These takeaways are not about winners or trends. They reflect what consistently influenced performance and what made us all smarter in 2025.

Balance mattered more than specialization

Across drivers, putters, shoes and balls, products that avoided weak areas consistently outperformed those built around one standout trait. Strong results came from stability and consistency rather than dominance in a single metric. One poor performance area repeatedly erased several good ones.

MOI alone did not explain driver forgiveness

High MOI helped preserve ball speed on off-center strikes but did not guarantee tighter dispersion. Forgiveness showed up as a dynamic result influenced by head design, shaft pairing and how golfers responded to visual cues at address. MOI contributed to outcomes but never explained them on its own.

Mini drivers solved a consistency problem

Mini drivers did not outperform full-sized drivers for distance. Their value showed up in launch control and repeatability for golfers who struggled with standard driver length. Testing confirmed that reliability mattered more than speed on many tee shots.

Golf ball fit was defined by flight and spin windows

Compression proved to be a poor starting point for ball selection. Launch, peak height, descent angle and spin rates explained how a ball performed throughout the bag. Balls that produced playable flight first delivered better overall results.

Relative distance performance mattered more than totals

Some golf balls are longer than others but the gap is often smaller than golfers expect. Testing showed that while absolute distances changed with conditions, the way balls compared to each other did not. That made relative performance a more useful way to evaluate distance.

Unconventional putter design did not hurt performance

Zero torque putters looked unfamiliar but their performance stayed competitive across the test pool. The spread from best to worst was tighter than both blade and mallet categories.

Subjective appeal was a poor predictor of results

Putters (and other equipment) that rated highly for looks and feel did not consistently perform better. Several models with lower subjective scores finished near the top of performance rankings. Visual preference failed as a reliable way to predict testing outcomes.

Best mallets for longer putts

Lower-priced gear often excelled in one area, not all of them

Across multiple categories, lower-priced products frequently delivered standout performance in a single metric such as distance or forgiveness. What they struggled to do was maintain that level across all measured areas. Testing showed that peak performance was easier to find than balanced performance.

Simpler design often delivered better real-world performance

Across rangefinders, GPS devices and golf bags, added features did not always improve usability or results. Clear optics and fast target acquisition mattered more than advanced modes in rangefinders while reliable stand mechanisms proved more important than pocket layouts and additional features in golf bags.

For You

For You

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Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Britt Olizarowicz is a scratch golfer, former teaching professional and one of MyGolfSpy’s leading voices on equipment testing and golf performance. She has spent more than 15 years working at private clubs in New York and Florida and now specializes in translating test data and swing mechanics into practical advice for everyday golfers. Britt began playing at age 7 and has never left the game. When she’s not writing, you’ll find her on the course, playing pickleball, cooking, running or out on the boat with her family.

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz





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      mg

      5 months ago

      Is the reason golf merchandise is expensive is that they don’t sell enough of the product so they try and pay for it in just a few sales?

      Reply

      Lefthack

      5 months ago

      What’s funny is when I did a fitting for the PXG mini, he put a full length driver shaft in it and I was hitting bombs my driver couldn’t touch. I still didn’t buy it, but it was eye opening.

      Reply

      HikingMike

      5 months ago

      Smaller driver, tighter sweet spot, more momentum transfer. You might have a little more speed also due to lower air drag. Away from the sweet spot, the larger driver head should do better at some point in momentum transfer. I don’t know if MGS has tested or discussed this.

      Reply

      Fake

      5 months ago

      Someone here said something along the lines of “no one is going to complain about an ugly putter if it saves them strokes.” I think the LAB putters look strange, but avoiding them for that reason is odd. I would also say avoiding a driver because it’s “loud” makes zero sense if it’s a good driver.

      Reply

      George

      5 months ago

      Flip side, and as an owner of an obnoxiously loud driver, there are plenty of other good drivers that *don’t* sound like you’re smashing a galvanized trash can with a softball bat. But I totally see your point. Especially on the ZT putters, and I have one of those too. Don’t care how butt ugly it is (and it is), so long as it keeps rolling everything straight.

      Brittany, aren’t a lot of the observations you note more descriptive of MGS’s testing and evaluation rubric, than of the equipment you’re testing? Thanks for your articles, both here and elsewhere. I usually learn something from each one.

      Reply

      Fake

      5 months ago

      I have an old Cleveland driver, and yes, it sounds like a bat hitting a trash can. Sometimes it’s part of the fun.

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