High MOI Putter
Argolf is the French maker that names its putters after Arthurian legend, and the Morgane keeps that going. Morgane is the name for Morgan le Fay, and the putter carries the billet-milled, made-in-France pedigree the brand built its reputation on. This is the 2025 high-MOI mallet in the line, so the shape is bigger and the weight is pushed out to the edges where it does the most good on a bad stroke.
High MOI is the whole pitch. Moment of inertia is just a measure of how hard the head resists twisting, and a mallet like this keeps the face from turning when you miss the center of the sweet spot. Catch a putt a little toward the toe and the ball still rolls close to where you aimed instead of dying short and left. That is forgiveness you feel over a full round.
The Morgane is face balanced, which points it at one kind of stroke. Rest the shaft across your finger and the face turns up toward the sky rather than the toe dropping. It wants to move straight back and straight through with very little face rotation. Add the alignment aid on top and you have a putter built to line up square, stay square, and forgive the misses. It won't reward a big arc stroke, and it isn't trying to.
Design
The Morgane is milled by Argolf in France, and the high-MOI mallet head is the reason the balance works the way it does. Weight sits at the perimeter of the head, far from the center, so the face fights rotation on off-center strikes. That perimeter mass is what earns the high-MOI label. It pairs naturally with the alignment aid up top, giving you a real sight line to square the face and a footprint large enough to frame the ball at address. You aim it, the ball starts on that line, and a slight mishit doesn't wreck the result. The spec to match to your own stroke is that the Morgane is face balanced. This is not a toe-hang putter, and that's the point. Face balancing suits a stroke that runs straight back and straight through with almost no opening and closing of the face. Do the finger test and the face points at the sky, telling you the head does not want to rotate. Give this to a player with a strong arc and it fights the release. Give it to a straight-stroke putter who wants maximum forgiveness and a clear line to aim down, and the Morgane does exactly the job it was milled for.
Who It's For
- Straight-stroke players who want a face-balanced mallet that stays square through the ball rather than opening and closing.
- Golfers who miss the center of the face often and want the high MOI to hold their line on toe and heel strikes.
- Anyone who aims better with a larger head and a clear sight line, since the alignment aid gives the eye a square reference at address.
- Buyers drawn to boutique billet-milled putters and the French, Arthurian-themed pedigree Argolf is known for.
- Players moving off a blade who want more stability and forgiveness without giving up milled-head feel.
Technology
About Argolf
Argolf brings a distinctive approach to putter design, focusing on quality materials, precision manufacturing, and performance-driven engineering.
Specifications
| Brand | Argolf |
| Model | Morgane |
| Year | 2025 |
| Type | High MOI |
| Toe hang | Face balanced |
| Alignment aid | Yes |
| MSRP | $549 |
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is the Argolf Morgane face balanced or toe hang?
- It is face balanced. Rest the shaft across your finger and the face turns up toward the sky instead of the toe dropping down, which tells you the head resists rotation. That fits a stroke running straight back and straight through with very little face turn. If your putter naturally swings on an arc and opens and closes, a toe-hang putter will suit you better. If your stroke stays square, the Morgane is built for you.
- What does high MOI actually mean for my putting?
- MOI is moment of inertia, a measure of how hard the head resists twisting on off-center hits. The Morgane pushes weight to the perimeter of a mallet-sized head, so when you catch a putt toward the toe or heel the face barely turns. The practical payoff is that mishits hold their line and roll closer to the hole instead of dying short and offline. It won't fix a bad read, but it forgives a bad strike.
- Who makes Argolf putters and where are they made?
- Argolf is a French putter maker that mills its heads from billet metal and names its models after Arthurian legend. Morgane refers to Morgan le Fay. The brand sits in the boutique, milled-putter category rather than the mass-produced big-box aisle, so you're paying for machining and made-in-France construction rather than a stamped-out head.
- Is the Morgane a good putter for a straight-back-straight-through stroke?
- Yes, that's exactly the stroke it's built for. The face-balanced setup wants to move straight with minimal rotation, and the high-MOI head adds forgiveness on misses. Combined with the alignment aid up top, you get a putter that lines up square, stays square, and keeps its line when you catch it slightly off center. Do the finger-balance test first to confirm your stroke matches.
- What does the alignment aid on the Morgane do?
- It gives you a square reference on top of the head to line up the face and start the ball on your intended line. A high-MOI mallet has the surface area for a proper sight line, which is a real advantage over a small blade. Paired with the perimeter weighting, you get a head that both points where you're aiming and resists twisting when a putt catches the face slightly off center.
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