PGA Show 2026 update: ProTee is teasing their new software platform called GolfCore, and from what they shared on the show floor, the big idea is simple: build the next generation of their sim experience by starting with the piece that makes everything else better - great courses.
We did a quick interview at the show with Jamel (lead software designer) to get a first look at what ProTee is working on. This is early-stage info, but it’s enough to understand the direction and why it matters for indoor golfers.
GolfCore is ProTee’s upcoming golf simulator software platform. The “core” focus (their words) is the course editor, the toolset that lets course designers build and publish courses that look and feel great.
In the interview, Jamal described the course editor as “the heart” of GolfCore, with the goal of enabling designers to create “fantastic courses” and to push fidelity (meaning visuals that feel more realistic and more immersive) without sacrificing the feel (physics and gameplay).
ProTee’s emphasis: course editor first, fidelity up, physics still matters.
In addition to GolfCore, ProTee also showed a preview of AI-based swing detection, a feature concept that would analyze a golf swing and provide a rating and feedback. That’s separate from the “course editor first” message, but it fits the broader theme: making the software experience more modern, more helpful, and more “sim-native.”
Most golfers will never touch a course editor. But, you can still benefit from course design.
ProTee’s messaging at the PGA Show was clear: they’re pushing GolfCore toward a release stage so golfers can use it and provide feedback. That usually means we should expect an early rollout period where features mature quickly, especially if the community and course creators engage.
At this stage, ProTee has not publicly shared every detail that golfers will care about (pricing, hardware compatibility, full feature list, course library approach, etc.). As those details firm up, the practical questions below will become the ones that matter most.
If ProTee follows through on what they’re prioritizing, course creation first, with visual realism and physics both taken seriously, GolfCore could be a meaningful step forward for golfers who care about immersion and “real golf” feel inside the sim.
We’ll share more as ProTee releases concrete details and as GolfCore gets closer to a version golfers can actually put through its paces.