Game Reviews

Battle Golf - Utterly stupid in the best way possible

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iOS
| Battle Golf
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Battle Golf - Utterly stupid in the best way possible
|
iOS
| Battle Golf

Battle Golf is utterly stupid. And I mean that in the best way possible.

It turns a pedestrian sport into a surreal, breakneck experience, and it does so on a single screen with the help a massive lake, some holes atop giant aquatic wildlife, and the means to knock out your opponent.

A funny old game

In single-player, Battle Golf is a time-attack score challenge, where you sink as many holes-in-one as possible in 60 seconds.

You're at the edge of a large expanse of water, and holes rise up from the depths, awaiting your swinging skills.

Most have banked edges, helpfully directing your ball towards the hole. However, the wildlife-based ones are all flat, and that much trickier because of it.

The controls are simple - tap once to stop your oscillating aiming arrow, and again to halt a power meter. Then just hope you got everything right and / or no seagulls are blocking your ball's path to the hole.

Success adds another five seconds to the clock.

Perfect break

Two-player is where the real fun is, though. You and an opponent use a single device, in a first-to-five battle. If you're feeling devious, you can smack your rival in the head with a ball, giving you precious seconds alone to score a point.

The game's pace and knowingly silly nature brings to mind Soccer Physics and developer Colin Lane's own Wrassling, but Battle Golf feels more coherent and controllable.

In a sense, it's really closer to Super Stickman Golf 2's race mode, albeit condensed into a single screen, and with a giant pink octopus as an occasional target.

Alas, there's no online play, and, to be honest, Battle Golf may be short-lived.

But it's fun, immediate, colourful, free, and almost certain to have you come to blows with a chum when a jammy shot into a whale's blowhole sneaks another contest 5-4.

Battle Golf - Utterly stupid in the best way possible

The perfect golf game for people who don't really care for golf, but enjoy loopy one-thumb arcade battles. And giant octopuses
Score
Craig Grannell
Craig Grannell
Craig gets all confused with modern games systems with a million buttons, hence preferring the glass-surfaced delights of mobile devices. He spends much of his time swiping and tilting (sometimes actually with a device), and also mulling why no-one’s converted Cannon Fodder to iPad.