Last updated: July 3, 2026
Softwarebeginner

GSPro LM Compatibility: What Works in 2026

Full Compatibility Guide

GSPro works with most launch monitors — but not all. Complete compatibility list: which LMs connect natively, which need a community connector, and which d.

The Short Answer

GSPro works with most launch monitors — but not all. Complete compatibility list: which LMs connect natively, which need a community connector, and which d.

By AceJuly 3, 20268 min read

You bought (or are about to buy) a launch monitor. You want to play GSPro. Does it work?

Short answer: probably yes. Long answer: it depends on which launch monitor, how it connects, and whether you’re willing to deal with a bridge app or a community connector.

GSPro is the most popular golf simulator software in the world — 4,000+ courses, $250/year, everything included. But it’s not plug-and-play with every device. Some launch monitors connect like they were made for each other. Some need a translator. Some just don’t work.

Let me save you the 45 minutes of forum scrolling I did. Here’s the complete compatibility list.

The Full GSPro Compatibility Table

Launch Monitor Price GSPro Support Connection Type Notes
Square Golf Omni $1,599 ✅ Native USB / WiFi No subscription, 4 cameras, indoor + outdoor
Square Golf HE $699 ✅ Native USB / WiFi Cheapest native GSPro, no PC needed
Foresight GC3 $5,249 ✅ Native USB No subscription, tour-level accuracy
Bushnell Launch Pro $2,499 ✅ Native (Gold tier) USB Needs $499/yr Gold sub for GSPro
Foresight GC3S $3,799 ✅ Native USB Subscription model, GSPro works
Uneekor EYE MINI $2,999 ✅ Native Ethernet Pro tier ($199/yr) needed for GSPro
Uneekor EYE MINI LITE $2,499 ✅ Native Ethernet 1yr free GSPro included with current promo
Uneekor EYE XR $3,999 ✅ Native Ethernet Overhead mounted, native GSPro
Uneekor EYE XO $5,999 ✅ Native Ethernet Premium overhead, native GSPro
Uneekor EYE XO2 $9,999 ✅ Native Ethernet Latest overhead, 4K cameras
ProTee VX $6,499 ✅ Native USB / Network Includes 2 swing cameras
VTrack $5,000 ✅ Native USB / Network No sub, 31×24 hitting zone
Trackman iO $13,995 ✅ Native Network Trackman Studio + GSPro compatible
Garmin Approach R50 $4,499 ✅ Native WiFi / USB Built-in screen, GSPro via PC
Full Swing KIT $4,999 ✅ Native USB / WiFi GSPro compatible, no subscription
FlightScope Mevo Gen2 $1,299 ✅ Native Bluetooth / USB Fusion Tracking, 8 E6 courses included
FlightScope Mevo+ $1,099 ✅ Native Bluetooth / USB Discontinued but still works
Garmin Approach R10 $499 ✅ Native Bluetooth Cheapest GSPro-compatible LM
Voice Caddie SC4 Pro $499 ⚠️ Limited USB / iPad GSPro via E6 bridge on PC only
SkyTrak+ $1,495 ⚠️ Community connector WiFi OpenSkyPlus2 connector needed
SkyTrak ST MAX $1,995 ⚠️ Community connector WiFi Same connector as SkyTrak+
SkyTrak (original) Used ⚠️ Community connector WiFi Legacy, community connector only
Blue Tees Rainmaker $599 ⚠️ Not yet Bluetooth App-only for now, GSPro may come
Rapsodo MLM2Pro $599 ❌ No iPhone E6 / Rapsodo app only
Shot Scope LM1 $199 ❌ No - Range-only device, no sim
Garmin Approach G82 $599 ❌ No - Garmin Golf app only
GolfIn IDRA II ✅ Was native USB Company defunct — no support
Par Breaker ✅ Was native - Company defunct — servers offline

How GSPro Licensing Works

GSPro costs $250/year. That’s it. One price, everything included. No tiers, no premium course packs, no upsells.

You buy it through the GSPro website or Steam. The Steam version is slightly more convenient (auto-updates, library management). The standalone version gives you more control over install location and beta branches.

What you get:

  • All 4,000+ courses. Every single one. Augusta, Pebble Beach, St Andrews, Sawgrass, your local muni. No premium tier locking 80% of the library behind a higher price.
  • Monthly updates. The Unity 6 migration is live in public beta. Course rendering is getting rebuilt in real time.
  • Access to the Discord community. 50,000+ people sharing courses, troubleshooting, and building new content.
  • Private course building. You can build your own course with the included course designer.

What you don’t get:

  • A Mac or iPad version. GSPro is Windows-only. If you don’t have a Windows PC, you need one. Budget $500-$1,500 depending on how nice you want it to look.
  • Phone support. There’s no 1-800-GSPRO. There’s a Discord, a community, and a knowledge base. That’s it.
  • Seamless online matchmaking. Online play works but it’s community-coordinated, not a “Quick Play” button.

If you’re not sure yet, GSPro has a 14-day free trial. Download it, connect your launch monitor, play a few rounds. You’ll know in the first hour whether it’s for you.

Tier 1: Native Support (Plug-and-Play)

These launch monitors connect to GSPro directly. No bridge apps, no community connectors, no frustration. You plug it in (or pair via Bluetooth), GSPro recognizes it, you play golf.

The best value native options:

Square Golf Omni ($1,599) — This is the easiest recommendation for a GSPro-focused buyer. Four cameras, zero subscription fees, no bridge app, indoor + outdoor. It’s the cheapest native GSPro launch monitor that actually delivers tour-adjacent accuracy. Full review →

Garmin R10 ($499) — The cheapest way to play GSPro. Connect via Bluetooth to the GSPro Connect app on your PC. It works. It’s reliable. The spin data is estimated (not measured), so don’t expect GC3-level accuracy — but for $499 plus $250/year for GSPro, you’re into sim golf for under $750. That’s insane. Full review →

FlightScope Mevo Gen2 ($1,299) — Fusion Tracking (radar + camera) gives you better indoor spin accuracy than pure radar. Connects natively. Eight E6 courses included if you want a second software. No subscription at all. Full review →

Foresight GC3 ($5,249) — The benchmark. No subscription, tour-level accuracy, native GSPro. If you have the budget, this is the endgame. Full review →

The Uneekor lineup (EYE MINI LITE at $2,499, EYE MINI at $2,999, EYE XR at $3,999) — All connect natively via Ethernet. The catch: Uneekor’s Pro Package ($199/year) is required for GSPro on most models. The current promo includes 1-year free GSPro + Pro Package. EYE MINI LITE review →

Bushnell Launch Pro ($2,499) — Connects natively but needs the Gold subscription tier ($499/year) for GSPro. Same hardware as the GC3, different business model. Great unit, annoying subscription. Full review →

Tier 2: Community Connector (Works, Extra Step)

These launch monitors work with GSPro, but not directly. You need a third-party bridge app that translates the launch monitor’s data into something GSPro understands.

SkyTrak+ ($1,495) — This is the big one. SkyTrak+ has been the most popular home launch monitor for years, but GSPro officially discontinued support for new buyers in 2026. The workaround: a community connector called OpenSkyPlus2. It works. It’s reliable. Thousands of people use it every day. But it’s an extra step — you install the connector, configure it, and launch it before GSPro.

The connector adds about 5 minutes to your setup time. Once it’s running, GSPro sees the SkyTrak+ like any other launch monitor. The shot delay is the same as always (5-8 seconds — camera processing, not the connector).

Important: If you already own a SkyTrak+ and have a GSPro license, you can keep using both. The discontinuation affects new buyers only. If you’re buying a SkyTrak+ today and want GSPro, factor in the community connector setup. Full SkyTrak+ review →

SkyTrak ST MAX ($1,995) — Same situation as the SkyTrak+. Same OpenSkyPlus2 connector. Same extra step. At $1,995 for essentially the same tracking engine with speed training added, the ST MAX is a harder sell for GSPro buyers. Full review →

SkyTrak (original, used market) — Same community connector. The original SkyTrak has been end-of-life for years and is truly discontinued. If you find one used for $500-800, the connector works fine. Just don’t expect updates or support.

Tier 3: Not Supported

These launch monitors don’t work with GSPro at all. If GSPro is your priority, don’t buy these.

Rapsodo MLM2Pro ($599) — Great budget launch monitor. Excellent for range sessions. Does not work with GSPro. Period. Limited to the Rapsodo app and E6 Connect. If you want GSPro at this price, get the Garmin R10 instead. Full review →

Shot Scope LM1 ($199) — A range-only device. No simulator support at all, including GSPro. It’s a $199 swing analyzer that gives you carry distance and club speed. Useful for practice. Not useful for sim golf. Full review →

Garmin Approach G82 ($599) — Garmin’s other launch monitor. It’s locked to the Garmin Golf ecosystem. No GSPro, no E6, no third-party software at all. The G82 is for people who want Garmin data only. If you want sim software, buy the R10 instead. Full review →

Blue Tees Rainmaker ($599) — Currently app-only (Blue Tees GAME). GSPro support may come in a future update, but it’s not here yet. The hardware is solid — a built-in display at this price is genuinely impressive. The software is unfinished. Patient buyers only. Full review →

The I/O Debate: Shot Delay and Why It Matters

You’ll see people in forums arguing about “shot delay” and “I/O” (input/output). Here’s what that actually means for your GSPro experience.

Camera-based launch monitors (SkyTrak+, Square Omni, GC3, BLP, Uneekor) process images of the ball at impact. That takes 5-8 seconds. You hit the ball, it shows up on screen 5-8 seconds later. This is normal. It’s not a bug. It’s how cameras work.

Radar-based launch monitors (Garmin R10, Mevo+, Mevo Gen2, Full Swing KIT) track the ball in flight. The data shows up instantly — 0.5-1 second after you hit. The trade-off: radar needs space (14-20 feet of total room depth) and indoor spin is less accurate.

Overhead monitors (EYE XO, VTrack, ProTee VX, Trackman iO) are the best of both worlds: instant data from ceiling-mounted cameras. No delay, no space issues. The catch: they cost $5,000-$14,000.

Does shot delay actually matter? For most people, no. If you’re playing a round with friends, the 5-second delay on a SkyTrak+ is barely noticeable between beers and conversation. If you’re doing a focused practice session where you hit 100 balls in 20 minutes, the radar units feel faster. It’s a preference, not a dealbreaker.

What You Actually Need to Run GSPro

GSPro needs three things: a launch monitor (from the table above), a Windows PC, and a GSPro license.

The PC:

  • Minimum: RTX 3060, 16GB RAM, i5/AMD equivalent
  • Recommended: RTX 4060, 32GB RAM, i7/Ryzen 7
  • Budget: $500-700 for a used/pre-built that meets minimum
  • Sweet spot: $900-1,200 for a dedicated sim PC

Full PC guide with specific build recommendations →

The license:

  • $250/year for everything
  • 14-day free trial available
  • Steam or standalone version

The internet:

  • You need internet to download courses (they’re large — 500MB-2GB each)
  • GSPro recommends downloading courses before you play, not streaming
  • A 100Mbps connection is plenty for course downloads

The space:

  • Radar LMs: 14-20 feet total room depth (8-10ft behind ball, 8-10ft ball flight)
  • Camera LMs: 8-12 feet total room depth (works in tighter spaces)
  • Overhead LMs: 8-10 feet ceiling height minimum, no depth requirement

Full space requirements guide →

The Verdict: Which Launch Monitor Should You Buy for GSPro?

If you’re on a budget ($500-700): Get the Garmin R10 ($499). It’s the cheapest way to play GSPro. Native Bluetooth connection. Works. Reliable. The spin data is estimated, not measured, so your wedge spin numbers will be rough — but for $750 total (R10 + GSPro), you’re playing Augusta in your garage. Full review →

If you want the best value under $2,000: Get the Square Golf Omni ($1,599). Four cameras, native GSPro, zero subscription fees, indoor + outdoor. It’s the cheapest camera-based launch monitor that connects natively and delivers accuracy within 2 yards of the GC3. This is the smartest dollar in sim golf right now. Full review →

If you want the best value under $1,500: Get the FlightScope Mevo Gen2 ($1,299). Fusion Tracking (radar + camera), 18 data parameters, no subscription, native GSPro. If you have the space (16+ feet), this is the best all-around radar LM for the money. Full review →

**If you already have a SkyTrak+: ** You’re fine. Install the OpenSkyPlus2 community connector and you’re playing GSPro in 15 minutes. The connector works. Thousands of people use it. Full SkyTrak+ review →

If you want the endgame: GC3 ($5,249) or Trackman iO ($13,995). Both connect natively. Both are the gold standard. The difference is whether you want ground-based or ceiling-mounted. GC3 review → | Trackman iO review →

If you have a budget LM that’s not on the compatible list: Check the GSPro compatibility list on their website before buying anything. The GSPro Discord also has a pinned compatibility thread that’s updated monthly. Don’t trust the Amazon listing — those sellers lie.

Here’s the link. Buy GSPro → Read the full GSPro review → See how GSPro compares to every other platform →

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