What They Have in Common
Both work indoors and outdoors. Neither requires special balls or club face stickers. Neither charges a subscription fee. Both connect to GSPro and E6 Connect. That's a meaningful shared baseline — you're not getting nickeled on ongoing costs with either one.
Where They Differ
Technology: Radar Fusion vs Four Cameras
The Mevo+ uses what FlightScope calls Fusion Tracking — a combination of 3D Doppler radar and camera technology. The Square Golf Omni uses a purely photometric system with four high-speed cameras.
These aren't just different flavors of the same thing. Radar and camera systems have genuinely different strengths. Radar excels at tracking ball flight outdoors over distance. Camera systems tend to be more reliable for spin data indoors, where radar can struggle without sufficient ball flight to validate the numbers. The Omni's four-camera setup, positioned beside the ball, should give it strong indoor spin accuracy — but since it hasn't shipped yet, that's based on spec sheet promises, not independent testing.
The Mevo+ handles indoor spin reasonably well for a radar-based unit, but it's worth knowing there's a ceiling there. Outdoors, it's solid across the board.
Built-In Display vs Phone Dependency
The Omni has a built-in on-unit display. The Mevo+ does not — you're running the FlightScope app on your phone or tablet.
At the range on a sunny day, this matters more than you'd think. Squinting at your phone between shots, managing app connectivity, keeping your phone propped up — it's a minor annoyance that adds up. If you hit the range without a reliable Wi-Fi setup and want shot data immediately after impact without fiddling with a device, the Omni's standalone display is a real functional advantage.
Data Depth
The Omni tracks a few things the Mevo+ doesn't list explicitly: swing path, face angle, dynamic loft, angle of attack, and impact location. That's meaningful club data beyond the basics. The Mevo+ covers 20 data points including the full ball flight picture — spin rate, spin axis, carry, apex, lateral landing — but impact location specifically is not listed in its feature set.
If you're using the launch monitor partly as a fitting or swing improvement tool, the Omni's club-side data depth looks stronger on paper.
Price and Availability
The Omni is listed at $1,599 MSRP. The Mevo+ was $2,000 at retail, though closeout pricing may bring it lower — depends entirely on where you find remaining stock.
Neither has ongoing subscription costs. E6 Connect integration is included with the Mevo+ (12 courses). The Omni includes Square Golf's own simulator software; GSPro and E6 licenses are sold separately, so factor that in if you're planning a sim setup. A GSPro license runs around $150, and E6 bundles vary.
The Pre-Order Risk
It bears saying plainly: the Square Golf Omni has not shipped. The specs look good. The price point is attractive. But "looks good on paper" is doing a lot of work here. Camera alignment, software polish, real-world accuracy — none of that has been validated by independent testing yet. We'll update this page once production units are in golfers' hands.
Who Should Buy Which
FlightScope Mevo+
- You found one in stock at a meaningful discount from the $2,000 retail price and need a unit now, not in a few months.
- You want a launch monitor with years of community support, known firmware behavior, and established GSPro/E6 integration history.
- You're primarily an outdoor range user and want reliable ball flight data in all conditions.
- You're comfortable with a phone-dependent workflow and already have a solid tablet setup for your sim space.
Square Golf Omni
- You're building a sim room in the next 3–6 months and aren't in a rush to take delivery.
- You want camera-based photometric accuracy, particularly for indoor spin data.
- A built-in display matters to you — range sessions without a phone propped up have real appeal.
- You want detailed club data including face angle, attack angle, and impact location alongside ball data.
- You're willing to accept some early-adopter risk in exchange for a lower price point and a technology approach you believe in.
The Bottom Line
The Mevo+ is a known quantity with a discontinued asterisk. The Omni is an unknown quantity with a promising spec sheet. If you can find a Mevo+ at closeout pricing below $1,500, it's competitive with the Omni even on price — and you're getting something you can use today. If you're patient and the Omni ships and performs as advertised, it may well be the better long-term buy at $1,599 with camera-based club data and a standalone display. Check back once production units have been reviewed.
Get the FlightScope Mevo+ if you find it at closeout pricing — and wait on the Omni until it ships.
See Also