How to Play, Rules, and Scoring for
Every Golf Game.

Golfers have invented dozens of formats that completely change how a round is played. Some focus on individual scoring. Others lean into teamwork, strategy, or friendly competition between groups.

Traditional golf games are more than just standard Stroke Play and Match Play. For decades, formats like Four-Ball, Chapman, and Stableford have added variety, excitement, and strategy to the game while remaining staples at clubs around the world.

These classic formats show how golfers have long found creative ways to play golf beyond simply counting total strokes.

Golf doesn’t have to be played strictly by the rulebook. Fun & Social Golf Games introduce creative ways to keep score, award points, and level the playing field so golfers of all skill levels can enjoy the round together.

Formats like Wolf, Bingo Bango Bongo, The King’s Honors and Vegas turn every hole into a new challenge—and sometimes a friendly wager or drink with friends. Perfect for a golf trip or any round where you want more action and personality.

A friendly Skins Game, a Scramble Match, our original Bounty Game, or an earned drink with your buddies can take any round to another level.

Betting and drinking formats add excitement to every hole, turning ordinary shots into legendary moments with something on the line. Whether it’s a little money, side bets, or a swig after a big putt, these games bring extra energy and camaraderie to the course.

Frequently Asked

Golf game questions, answered.

What’s the best golf game for 4 players?
For most foursomes, Wolf is the top choice — it rotates a lone wolf against the other three each hole and creates built-in strategy on every tee. If you want a team format instead, Best Ball and Scramble are the go-tos. If money’s on the line, Nassau runs three bets in parallel across the front 9, back 9, and full round.
What is the most popular golf betting game?
Nassau is the most widely played golf betting game in the U.S., followed closely by Skins and Wolf. Nassau works because you’re really playing three matches at once, which means a blowout on the front 9 doesn’t kill the round — the back 9 and overall bets are still live.
How do handicaps work in golf games?
Most formats apply strokes based on the hole’s stroke index and each player’s course handicap. In team games like Scramble or Four-Ball, handicap allowances are usually reduced (often to 85% or 90%). Our free handicap calculator does the math automatically for any format you pick.
What’s a good golf game for mixed skill levels?
Stableford and Bingo Bango Bongo are the two best formats for groups with a wide skill range. Stableford awards points for each hole’s score relative to par, so a blowup hole costs you one number instead of a wrecked card. Quota works similarly — every player races their own handicap-based target. Bingo Bango Bongo awards points for things the high-handicapper can still win — first on green, closest to pin, first in the hole.
What’s the difference between match play and stroke play?
Stroke play counts every shot over 18 holes, and the lowest total wins. Match play is hole-by-hole — win more holes than your opponent and you win the match, regardless of total strokes. Match play is more forgiving of one bad hole and usually more fun for head-to-head golf.
Can you play golf betting games with more than 4 players?
Yes. Skins, Stableford, and Quota scale to any group size. Wolf technically works with 5 players though it’s best at 4. For groups of 8+ like golf trips, Scramble tournaments with side bets (closest to pin, longest drive, low net) are the standard.