What They Have in Common
Both sit in the $1,300–$1,600 range, work indoors and outdoors, skip the subscription model entirely, and don't require special balls or stickers to track spin. Both connect to GSPro and E6 Connect. That's a meaningful baseline — no ongoing fees for either one.
Where They Differ
Technology: Radar vs Cameras
The Mevo Gen 2 uses what FlightScope calls Fusion Tracking — a combination of 3D Doppler radar and synchronized image processing. The Omni uses four high-speed cameras and is fully photometric.
These are fundamentally different approaches with different tradeoffs. Radar-based systems tend to struggle with indoor spin accuracy because there's not enough ball flight to fully track the ball's behavior — the Mevo Gen 2 mitigates this with its camera component, but it's still a hybrid, not a pure photometric setup. Camera-based systems like the Omni can measure spin at impact rather than inferring it from flight, which is generally the stronger approach for indoor use. Whether the Omni actually executes on that promise is something we'll know once people have tested production units.
Data Depth
The Mevo Gen 2 tracks 12 data points including ball speed, club speed, smash factor, spin rate, spin axis, carry, apex, and lateral landing. It also offers a shot tracer, video overlay, and a putting mode.
The Omni's listed metrics include swing path, face angle, dynamic loft, angle of attack, and impact location — data the Mevo Gen 2 doesn't offer. If you're doing serious swing analysis and want to know what the club face is doing at impact, that's a real difference. The Omni also tracks smash factor (listed as club data), but the club data depth looks meaningfully richer on paper.
Display and Setup
The Omni has a built-in on-unit display. The Mevo Gen 2 requires a phone, tablet, or PC running the FS Golf app. This matters more than people expect: if you're hitting at an outdoor range without great Wi-Fi, or you don't want to prop up your phone next to your mat, the Omni's standalone display removes one variable. The Mevo Gen 2 works fine with a phone, but "fine" requires your phone to be out there, charged, and connected.
Both units are positioned beside the ball rather than behind it, which helps with room setup — but the Mevo Gen 2's physical specs (under 1 lb, USB-C charging) are confirmed. The Omni's weight, dimensions, battery life, and connectivity aren't publicly confirmed yet.
Subscriptions and Software
Neither requires a subscription — that's the headline. The Mevo Gen 2 bundles a lifetime E6 Connect license covering 8 courses. GSPro works without a per-device fee. The Omni includes Square Golf's own simulator software and lists GSPro and E6 Connect compatibility, though those licenses are sold separately. If you're already paying for a GSPro subscription, that's fine — you're set either way. If you're coming in fresh and want sim courses without an additional purchase, the Mevo Gen 2's E6 bundle has a small edge.
Pre-Order Risk
The Omni is not shipping yet. That's not a knock on Square Golf as a company, but it's a real consideration. Pre-order hardware from newer brands carries inherent uncertainty — firmware, software stability, real-world accuracy, and customer support are all unknowns until production units are in the wild. The Mevo Gen 2 has an established user base, documented quirks, and available community feedback.
Who Should Buy Which
FlightScope Mevo Gen 2
- You want something you can buy today, set up this weekend, and start using immediately.
- You're primarily outdoors or have a sim room where you'll run a phone or tablet anyway.
- You want a proven radar-plus-camera hybrid with an active user community and documented accuracy.
- You don't need advanced club data like face angle or angle of attack — carry distances and spin are enough.
- You want the E6 Connect bundle included without an extra purchase.
Square Golf Omni
- You're building a dedicated indoor sim setup and want camera-based spin tracking without buying into the Foresight or TrackMan price tiers.
- Advanced club data — face angle, swing path, impact location — is central to what you're trying to learn.
- You're comfortable waiting for a pre-order to ship and are willing to be an early adopter.
- A built-in display matters to you, especially for range use without a phone.
- You've done your homework on Square Golf as a company and are confident in their timeline.
The Bottom Line
The Omni is interesting. If its four-camera photometric system delivers accurate spin and club data at $1,599 with no subscription, that's a legitimately strong product. But "if" is doing a lot of work in that sentence — it hasn't shipped, and there are no independent accuracy reports yet.
The Mevo Gen 2 is $300 cheaper, available now, no subscriptions, no stickers, no special balls. It's not perfect — indoor spin data from any radar-based system deserves a raised eyebrow — but it has a real track record. When the Omni ships and people start testing it, revisit this page.
For now, the math is simple.
Get the FlightScope Mevo Gen 2.
See Also