2v2 Team Format
Vegas turns a quiet hole into a six-figure swing. Two teams, each hole becomes a two-digit number, and a single birdie can flip the math in your favor. caddie.fun handles the digit logic and the flip rule automatically.
Vegas
Team digits
The Mechanics
Four moving parts. The fourth is the one that makes it Vegas.
Four players split into two pairs. Each team plays their own balls, then combines hole scores into a single team digit.
Your team's better score goes first. If you make a 4 and your partner makes a 5, your hole digit is 45 - not 54.
If either team makes a birdie or better, the other team's digits flip from low-first to high-first. A 4-5 hole becomes 54 instead of 45.
Subtract the lower team digit from the higher each hole. The difference, multiplied by your agreed stake-per-point, is the payout.
Worked Example
Your team makes a 4 and a 5. Their team makes a 4 and a 6.
Now imagine the same hole, but you made a birdie 3 instead of a 4:
Step by Step
Split into two teams of two and agree on a value per point - typically $0.10 to $1.00 per point. caddie.fun handles the digit math automatically.
Each player plays their own ball through the green. There's no alternating shots and no choosing balls - everyone holes out as usual.
Your team's lower score goes first. A 4 and a 5 becomes 45. A 3 and a 6 becomes 36. Snowman (8) stays 8 unless someone else is worse.
If you make a birdie or better, your opponent's digits flip. Their 4-5 hole becomes 54. A single birdie can turn a small hole into a huge swing.
Subtract the lower team's digit from the higher each hole. Multiply by the per-point stake. Stakes settle automatically when the round ends.
Hole is a push - no points either way. Move to the next hole.
Big numbers create huge gaps. A team with 4-5 (digit 45) vs a team with 6-10 (digit 6-10 = 610 if you go raw, but most groups cap at a snowman). caddie.fun supports an optional max-score cap to keep one bad hole from busting the round.
Yes. Any score better than par triggers the flip. Eagles, hole-outs, and birdies all flip the opposing digits.
Yes. If both teams make a birdie, both teams' digits flip. The net swing usually cancels out, but with a wider score spread it can still create movement.
Yes. Strokes are applied to gross scores before the digits are combined, so a handicap stroke can flip your digit ordering or even trigger a birdie flip.
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