Products / Launch Monitors / Uneekor
The value-accuracy sweet spot.
Uneekor carved out the “professional accuracy without the closed ecosystem” niche — premium infrared-camera data, no marked balls, open software, and the broadest price ladder here (sub-$1,500 to ~$11,000). Here's exactly where it lands against every other brand we carry.
Apogee aside, position tracks price and brand tier — not a verdict on accuracy, since every unit here measures the ball well. We place Apogee at the bottom because it’s locked out of GSPro yet still costs several thousand dollars. The biggest differences are software (open vs. closed) and total cost of ownership. We sell and install every one.
What you're paying for
Infrared cameras — and no marked balls.
Uneekor’s high-speed infrared cameras pair Ball Optix and Club Optix to measure ball and clubface directly. “Dimple Optix” reads any normal ball — no marked balls on the current lineup — and the flagship EYE XO2 adds a third camera for a larger ~28×21 in hitting area.
It’s widely called tour-adjacent accuracy at a mid-tier price, and it’s open: GSPro, E6, TGC and more. On the overhead XO/XO2 the third-party connector is free; native sim graphics lag GSPro, which is exactly why most owners pair it with GSPro (GameDay is Uneekor’s newer answer).
Best for
Home-sim builders who want premium-camera accuracy and open software at a mid-tier price — with no marked balls.
Mind the model rules
On overhead XO/XO2 the GSPro/E6 connector is free; the portable EYE MINI needs at least the Pro tier ($199/yr) — or a one-time unlock — to run third-party sims. Native Refine graphics feel dated, and a strong PC (i7+/RTX) is recommended.
The quick take
"If you want premium-camera accuracy and open software without the tour-name premium — and never want to mark a ball — Uneekor is the value sweet spot. Pair it with GSPro and it sings."
— All Seasons install team
Is it the right call?
The case for Uneekor — and against.
Buy it if…
- You want premium-camera accuracy at a mid-tier price
- No marked balls and a big overhead hitting area matter
- You want open software — with a free GSPro/E6 connector on overhead units
- You’re building a dedicated home sim
Look elsewhere if…
- You want top-tier native sim graphics out of the box
- You’re buying an EYE MINI and want zero subscription
- Your ceiling is too low for an overhead mount
- You want the single most recognized brand name
How it stacks up
Uneekor vs. the field.
| Brand | Sensing | Marked balls | Open (GSPro)? | Subscription | Hardware from |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Uneekor | Infrared cameras | No | Yes (free*) | $0–$599/yr | ~$1,499 (Mini) |
| Trackman | Hybrid radar + camera | No | No — TPS only | ~$700–1,100/yr | ~$13,995 (iO) |
| Foresight | Photometric (quad) | Club dot | Yes | Newer SKUs | ~$6,999 (GC3) |
| Apogee | Stereoscopic IR | No | E6 only | E6 tiers | ~$9,000 |
| ProTee VX | Dual AI cameras | No | Yes | None | ~$5,500 |
Simplified for orientation (early–mid 2026) — pricing and software terms move with promotions, so verify at point of sale. *Uneekor overhead units (XO/XO2) include the GSPro/E6 connector free; the EYE MINI needs a Pro tier. The strategic split is software: ProTee, Uneekor and Foresight run GSPro; Trackman and Apogee don’t. Trackman earns its closed system with tour pedigree — Apogee is the one we hesitate on, shut out of GSPro yet still several thousand dollars, which lands it at the bottom of our list.
The lineup
The broadest ladder here.
Uneekor EYE XO2
Overhead · 3 IR cameras · flagship
The flagship: a third infrared camera adds a larger ~28×21 in hitting area, faster capture and tighter readings on off-center strikes. Reads any ball, mounts overhead. All-In ~$13,000.
Uneekor EYE XO
Overhead · 2 IR cameras
The two-camera overhead unit — most of the XO2 experience for roughly $3,000 less. Free third-party connector, no marked balls.
Uneekor EYE MINI series
Floor · portable
From the stationary Mini Core (~$1,499) and Mini Lite (~$2,749) to the battery/wifi EYE MINI (~$3,500–$4,500) — the same camera approach, take-anywhere. Third-party sims need a Pro tier.
FAQ
Uneekor questions.
01 How much does a Uneekor simulator cost?
+
Uneekor spans the widest ladder here — from ~$1,499 (EYE MINI Core) to ~$8,000 (EYE XO) and ~$11,000 (EYE XO2, All-In ~$13,000), early–mid 2026. Some sites quote XO2 promos near $6,999, but ~$11,000 is the consistent MSRP — verify current.
02 Does Uneekor need marked balls?
+
No — the current lineup uses “Dimple Optix” to read any normal ball, so no marked balls are required. (Only the legacy QED needed them; avoid it for a public facility.)
03 What about software and subscriptions?
+
Uneekor runs View/Refine/GameDay natively and is open to GSPro, E6, TGC and more. On overhead XO/XO2 the third-party connector is free; the EYE MINI needs at least the Pro tier ($199/yr), or a one-time unlock. GSPro adds its own $250/yr license. Subscription tiers run Player (free) → Pro $199 → Champion $399 → Ultimate $599.
04 What's the difference between the EYE XO and XO2?
+
The XO2 adds a third infrared camera for a larger ~28×21 in hitting area, faster capture and tighter readings on off-center strikes. The XO (two cameras) saves roughly $3,000. Both mount overhead and read any ball.
Want this scored against the others?
We review every brand we sell the same honest way. Compare the four other lines — or let us match one to your goal and budget.
Still weighing it up? Tell us your room and goal and we'll be straight about whether Uneekor is the right fit for you.
Start a Conversation