Blade Putter
SeeMore built its name on one idea: line up the putter the same way every single time. The mFGP2 is the milled descendant of the FGP, the blade Zach Johnson had in the bag when he won the 2007 Masters. That lineage matters, because this is not a putter chasing trends. It is a compact, classic blade for players who trust their hands and want the stroke to repeat.
What sets it apart is RifleScope Technology, the red dot and two white lines on the top of the flange. You cover the dot with the shaft, hide the white lines behind it, and the face is square with your hands leading. Do that at address and your setup is honest every time. It takes the guesswork out of aim without giving you a big sightline to fuss over.
The mFGP2 has full toe hang, so it wants to swing on an arc. If your putting stroke opens and closes naturally, this head follows along instead of fighting you. Slower, truer greens reward the soft feel of the milled face. This is a feel putter first, and it plays like one.
Design
The head is milled from 303 stainless steel, which gives the face a firm but responsive feel off short and medium putts. Full toe hang comes from the flow neck, and it is a genuine full hang, not the half-shaft-offset compromise you see on a lot of blades. That means the face rotates freely through the stroke, so an arcing motion feels natural and a straight-back-straight-through player will notice the head trying to release. There is no traditional topline sightline here, and that is the point. Instead of a painted line to aim, SeeMore gives you the RST dot-and-lines system on the flange that keys off the shaft. The look at address is clean and traditional, a small footprint with a rounded topline. It is a putter that trusts you to make a stroke rather than propping you up with forgiveness features.
Who It's For
- You have an arcing stroke and want a blade with real toe hang that releases on its own
- Consistent aim and setup is your weak point, and the RifleScope system fixes that at address
- Smooth, slower greens are your home track and you value soft milled feel over a firmer insert
- You prefer a compact, classic head shape with no busy alignment lines cluttering the top
- You are a confident lag putter who trusts feel more than a big forgiving mallet
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 | mFGP2 |
| Year | 2024 |
| Type | Blade |
| Toe hang | Full toe hang |
| Alignment aid | No |
| MSRP | $349 |
Frequently Asked Questions
- How does the SeeMore RST alignment actually work on the mFGP2?
- At address you position the putter so the shaft covers the red dot and hides the two white lines on the flange. When the dot disappears and the lines are tucked behind the shaft, the face is square and your hands are properly forward. It is a setup check, not a sightline you stare down, and it makes your aim repeatable putt after putt.
- Is the mFGP2 right for a straight-back-straight-through stroke?
- Not really. It has full toe hang, which is built for a stroke that opens and closes on an arc. If you putt straight back and through, you will feel the head wanting to release and rotate, and a face-balanced mallet or a shorter-hang blade would fit you better.
- What is the mFGP2's connection to the putter Zach Johnson used at the Masters?
- The mFGP2 is the milled version of SeeMore's FGP, the blade Zach Johnson was putting with when he won the 2007 Masters. Same core shape and RST alignment concept, but this one is milled from 303 stainless for a softer, more premium feel.
- How does the milled face feel compared to an insert putter?
- It feels firmer and more connected than a soft polymer insert. The 303 stainless milling gives you clear feedback on where you struck the face, which good putters like because it tells them exactly what happened. On fast greens some players find it a touch hot, so it suits smoother, medium-paced surfaces best.
- Does the mFGP2 have any forgiveness for off-center hits?
- It is a compact blade, so forgiveness is not its strength. Mishits toward the toe or heel will lose some speed and roll off line more than they would on a high-MOI mallet. This putter rewards a repeatable stroke and center contact rather than bailing out bad ones.
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