Mallet Putter
SeeMore built its name on one idea: get the putter face pointed where you think it's pointed before you ever move it back. The Giant FGP takes that idea and puts it in a mallet body. If you know the SeeMore FGP blade, the one Zach Johnson used to win the 2007 Masters, this is the same DNA in a bigger, more forgiving shape.
The headline feature is RST, SeeMore's RifleScope Technology. It's a small red dot on the flange with two white lines flanking it, and the whole system only lines up correctly when you set your hands and shaft in the right position at address. Cover the red dot with the shaft, center the gap, and you're square. Miss the setup and the alignment tells on you immediately. That feedback is the point.
This is a putter with a specific philosophy, and it rewards golfers who buy into it. The mallet build adds stability and a higher MOI than the classic blade, so off-center strikes hold their line better. Mid toe hang means it fits a stroke with a slight arc, not a dead-straight pendulum. It's not trying to be the flashiest mallet on the rack. It's trying to make you a more consistent aimer.
Design
The Giant FGP uses SeeMore's RST alignment on the top of a mallet head. You'll see the red dot sitting between two white lines on the flange, and the setup only looks correct when your hands are forward and the shaft covers the dot. That built-in check is the core of the design, and it does more work than a plain sight line ever could. The larger mallet footprint pushes weight to the perimeter for a steadier, higher-MOI feel through impact. Mid toe hang keeps the face rotating naturally through the stroke, which suits players who arc the putter slightly rather than move it straight back and through. It's a heavier, more planted feel than the original blade, but the alignment logic underneath is identical.
Who It's For
- You want a repeatable way to confirm your aim and hand position before every stroke, not just a sight line to eyeball.
- Your stroke has a slight arc, which is what mid toe hang is built to match.
- You miss more from poor alignment and setup than from a bad roll, and you're willing to work at fixing that.
- You like the SeeMore FGP idea but want the extra forgiveness and stability of a mallet head.
- You'd rather have a putter with a clear teaching function than one loaded with adjustable gimmicks.
Technology
About SeeMore
SeeMore brings a distinctive approach to putter design, focusing on quality materials, precision manufacturing, and performance-driven engineering.
Specifications
| Brand | SeeMore |
| Model | Giant FGP |
| Year | 2024 |
| Type | Mallet |
| Toe hang | Mid toe hang |
| Alignment aid | Yes |
| MSRP | $349 |
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is RST and how does the red dot alignment work?
- RST is RifleScope Technology, SeeMore's patented setup system. There's a red dot on the flange with two white lines on either side of it. When you set up correctly, with your hands forward and the shaft leaning slightly toward the target, the shaft hides the red dot and centers the white gap. If you can see the red dot, your hands are too far back or your alignment is off. It gives you an instant, honest check on both aim and shaft position.
- How is the Giant FGP different from the classic SeeMore FGP blade?
- Same alignment system, different head. The classic FGP is a heel-shafted blade. The Giant FGP is a mallet, so it's larger, heavier at the perimeter, and more stable on off-center hits. If you liked the FGP's setup logic but wanted more forgiveness and a more planted feel, the mallet is the answer.
- What kind of putting stroke does the mid toe hang suit?
- Mid toe hang fits a stroke with a moderate arc, where the face opens a little on the way back and squares through impact. If your putter naturally swings on an arc rather than straight back and straight through, this hang matches your tendency. Players with a very straight, pendulum stroke usually do better with a face-balanced putter.
- Is the Giant FGP good for high handicappers?
- It can be, with a caveat. The mallet shape and higher MOI help forgive mishits, which suits a developing player. But the RST system asks you to set up correctly every time, so you have to be willing to learn and repeat the process. If you commit to it, the alignment feedback can straighten out a lot of aim problems. If you want to just grab a putter and go without thinking about setup, this isn't that club.
- Do I have to use SeeMore's alignment lines on my golf ball with this putter?
- No. The RST system works off the putter itself, using the red dot and white lines on the flange to confirm your setup. Drawing a line on your ball is optional and comes down to personal preference. The putter's job is to check your hand position and face aim before you swing, and it does that whether or not your ball is marked.
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