Foresight’s App Gets a Big Upgrade: Club View Brings 3D Swing Visuals
Want to see your swing like never before? Marc breaks down how Foresight is pairing tour-level accuracy with a sleek, mobile-first experience.
Foresight Sports has quietly been building out an entirely new layer to its already dominant launch monitor ecosystem. With their relatively new rebuilt app, the company has finally entered the mobile-first era that competitors like FlightScope and Rapsodo embraced earlier.
And now, the app just got its most interesting upgrade yet: Club View.
To me, it’s exciting to see the brand trusted by the top players for accuracy make a play that feels like it brings some of that advanced analysis to a more consumer-friendly app experience.
That’s why I think that not only is Club View an interesting story in golf tech, but I think the overall enhancement of Foresight’s mobile presence only strengthens their position as the go-to for serious launch monitor users.
Let’s break it all down.
What Club View Does
Club View gives you a 3D visualization of your swing through impact, with three perspectives:
- Top Down
- Side View
- Impact View
Each view also displays 14 club and ball data points, and the visuals adapt to whatever you’re swinging — driver, irons, or wedges. You can also toggle between single-shot analysis or group averages to see trends over a session.
It’s a major enhancement for Foresight in terms of an even deeper way to interpret club delivery. Numbers are great, but seeing them mapped onto your actual swing path makes it a lot easier to connect data with motion.
Think of this as a big win for visual learners.
How to Access It
To get Club View, you’ll need one of the club-data-enabled Foresight launch monitors — GC3, GC3S, GCQuad, QuadMAX, or Falcon — with four clubface stickers in place.
After connecting to the Foresight app, just start a shot analysis session, select your club, and flip the view to Club View.
From there, you’re in. Instant 3D playback, synced with the data you already were getting.
If you’ve tried FlightScope’s Mevo+ with Face Impact Location, you’ll notice a key difference. FlightScope already gives you impact heat mapping. Foresight doesn’t have that piece yet.
Club View instead gives you a big-picture visualization of swing path through impact. Foresight has said that face impact heat mapping is coming, which will close that gap.
Why This Matters for the Rebuilt Foresight App
This isn’t just about one feature. It’s about Foresight finally leaning into the mobile-first experience golfers expect.
Until recently, I’ve always looked at their strengths as being pure accuracy and reliability.
But competitors like FlightScope, Rapsodo, and Garmin were ahead on the app side of things.
That changed with the recent overhaul of the Foresight Sports app. It’s still relatively new, but it already includes:
- Real-time shot tracking
- MyBag management and club comparisons
- Custom data zones
- Integrated support and device controls
Add LINK-Enabled devices into the mix — letting you actually pair your launch monitor data with your on-course rangefinder experience via the Foresight and Bushnell apps — and the Foresight ecosystem suddenly feels as modern and user-friendly as it does precise.
Now, with Club View layered in, the Foresight app is turning into a serious advantage. You’re getting the same accuracy that’s been trusted by tour players and coaches for years, but with a mobile interface that makes that power easier and more realistic to use than ever.
That’s a tough combination for competitors to match. Accuracy plus usability is the one-two punch, and Foresight is taking big steps in that direction.
If you’re already in the Foresight world, fire up the app and put these features like Club View to work. If you’re not, this is one more reason to pay attention because Foresight is strengthening its position.
About PlayBetter Golf Reviewer Marc Sheforgen
Marc "Shef" Sheforgen is a golf writer whose passion for the game far exceeds his ability to play it well. Marc covers all things golf, from product reviews and equipment recommendations to event coverage and tournament analysis. When he’s not playing, watching, or writing about golf, he enjoys traveling (often golf-related), youth sports coaching, volunteering, and record collecting.