Super Battle Golf Hole in One Guide (Showdown + Gauntlet)

Getting consistent aces in this game isn’t about luck as much as it is about sticking to very specific alignment habits. After spending a lot of time testing angles and power combinations, these two setups turned out to be the most repeatable ways to land Hole-in-Ones without needing constant fine adjustments. The focus here is simple: clean positioning, easy-to-repeat power timing, and setups that work reliably when executed the same way each time.

Everything below sticks strictly to the exact methods that have proven consistent. No guesswork, no extra tweaks — just follow the steps exactly as described and you’ll see how repeatable they actually are.

Super Battle Golf Hole in One Guide (Showdown + Gauntlet)

Desert 1 – Showdown (Hole-in-One Setup)

This hole is surprisingly consistent once you lock into the right aiming routine. The key isn’t experimenting with dozens of angles — it’s sticking to a very precise alignment method that makes full-power shots predictable.

To begin, set your initial aim to 51 degrees. At this stage, don’t worry about power yet. Focus entirely on lining up the flag so it sits perfectly centered in the middle of your power bar. That visual alignment matters more than anything else because it ensures your shot path stays stable.

After you’ve centered the flag properly, make a very small adjustment by shifting the angle to 52 degrees. This tiny change is what fine-tunes the trajectory so the ball lands exactly where it needs to.

Once everything is lined up, commit fully to the swing and fire at 100 percent power. Using full power is important here because it’s much easier to repeat consistently than trying to land partial swings with precision.

Sometimes the tee box spawn can feel slightly inconsistent, but sticking strictly to this exact method — same alignment, same angle, same power — will still produce reliable results over repeated attempts.

Other angle and power combinations can technically work too, such as 49 degrees with about 93 percent power or 50 degrees with roughly 95 to 96 percent power. Even though those setups can occasionally land an ace, they aren’t as consistent because hitting exact partial power values repeatedly is much harder.

If the shot doesn’t go in on the first try, you can hold the retry key immediately before the round timer starts. Doing this won’t count as a Hole-in-One officially, but it still allows you to finish quickly and stay competitive in the match.

Coast 8 – Gauntlet (Hole-in-One Setup)

This hole behaves very differently compared to Showdown because spawn positioning plays a huge role in whether the setup works reliably. Consistency here depends entirely on where you spawn on the tee box.

For this method to work, you must start from the far-left spawn position. From that specific location, the alignment becomes extremely reliable, and as long as you follow the setup correctly, the shot should land consistently every time.

Once you confirm you have the correct spawn, begin by focusing on your transparent white aiming bar. The goal is to position the flag icon arrow exactly in the center of that bar. This alignment step is critical because it ensures the shot path remains perfectly straight toward the target.

After centering the alignment, adjust your shot angle to 51 degrees. This angle has proven to be the most stable for achieving repeatable aces from this position.

With the aim locked in, fire using 100 percent power. Just like the Showdown setup, full power makes the timing easier to repeat accurately, which is why it’s used here instead of partial swings.

At the moment, no other setups have been confirmed to work as reliably as this one. While alternative methods may exist, this alignment and power combination remains the most dependable way to consistently score a Hole-in-One on Gauntlet when spawning from the correct position.

These two setups focus purely on consistency rather than complicated adjustments. Following the exact alignment steps and committing to full-power swings makes them reliable enough to repeat across multiple attempts without needing constant recalibration.