
Angry Golf
Angry Birds meets miniature golf in a budget arcade package that's playable in short bursts, but don't expect polish or any friends to join you.
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About Angry Golf
My honest first reaction to Angry Golf was that somebody built a proof-of-concept in a weekend game jam and then hit the publish button. That is not a pure insult - there is a functional loop here, and for the right person at the right price point it scratches a specific itch - but you should know exactly what you are signing up for before adding it to your library. The core mechanic asks you to line up a pointer, set your power, and shoot a ball toward a goal across a 3D course. Each level has a hard cap on the number of shots allowed, and blowing past that cap means restarting the level from scratch. Fall off the track and your ball respawns at the beginning. Hit one of the traps scattered around - bombs, laser beams, evil pigs, mystery invisible holes - and you respawn from your last shooting spot. Early levels require a single shot to complete, while later stages open up with five or more attempts budgeted in. There are also hidden mystery boxes that act as easter eggs and hand out achievements for the curious. Steam achievements are tied to finishing levels under the shot limit, which gives the score-chasing crowd a mild reason to replay. Here is where the honesty has to kick in hard: the technical side of Angry Golf is rough. The Switch version was reviewed and described as feeling "almost entirely reliant on random luck rather than skill," with visible geometry pop-in that breaks immersion immediately. The PC build shares the same Unreal Engine foundation, and community feedback suggests similar jank carries over. Controls are functional but feel imprecise in a genre where precision is the entire point. There is no multiplayer, no co-op, no couch mode - so the Saturday night tournament crowd I usually champion is completely out of luck here. This is a solo affair, full stop. Who does it work for, then? Genuinely casual players who want something low-stakes to click through during a lunch break, completionists who collect Steam achievements on micro-budget titles, or anyone who just wants to see if they can hole-in-one every level without the game demanding much from their hardware. System requirements are almost laughably light - an i3 processor and 512 MB of RAM gets you in the door. That accessibility on the hardware side is real, even if the gameplay polish is not. Solo-only, technically shaky, and thin on content - Angry Golf is the definition of a filler title. It is not broken beyond redemption, but it is a long way from a satisfying golf game. If the concept genuinely appeals, the sequel Angry Golf 2 exists and may have ironed out some of the rougher edges. Riley, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- windows 8
- Memory
- 512 MB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0
- Storage
- 3 GB available space
- Graphics
- nividia 600 series
- Processor
- i3
- Sound Card
- Direct x9
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 8.1
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0
- Storage
- 3 GB available space
- Graphics
- NVIDIA GeForce 900 series
- Processor
- i7
- Sound Card
- Direct x9
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Reviews & Ratings
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Game Info
- Developer
- Tero Lunkka
- Publisher
- Tero Lunkka
- Release Date
- Sep 13, 2019







