The ifrothgolf review
Blue Tees' 2026 flagship laser rangefinder with built-in GPS smarts, app-based shot tracking and AI-adjusted yardages.
What's great
The spec sheet reads like a £450 rangefinder. The OLED display is bright and crisp, 7x magnification makes finding the pin easier than on most rivals, and the flag lock is fast and confident. Golf Monthly said the features on this thing blew the market wide open, and National Club Golfer called it a premium product at a reasonable price. USB-C charging means no more hunting for CR2 batteries, the IP67 rating means proper British weather is fine, and the AI distance calibration genuinely helps on cold days when the ball goes nowhere.
Worth knowing
The GAME app is the soft spot, with reviewers consistently flagging it as clunky next to the hardware. There is a real learning curve given how much is packed in, so expect a few rounds of fiddling. The carry case has been criticised too. And the brand does not have Bushnell's resale value or track record.
The verdict
The value pick in premium rangefinders right now, as long as you accept the app is a work in progress.





