A golf swing video analysis app should help you see one change clearly.
Good swing analysis is not about staring at every frame until something looks wrong. It is about choosing one checkpoint, marking it clearly, and comparing enough video to know whether the movement changed.
What to look for in a swing video app
The useful features are usually simple: frame-by-frame review, drawing tools, slow playback, before-after comparison, tags, notes, and an export path. Fancy features matter less if you cannot quickly find the clip from your last range session.
SwingDraw keeps those basics close. It lets you record or import swing video, draw on the frame, review path and body position, save notes, and compare swings without turning self-review into a video editing project.
A practical video analysis flow
- Film from a consistent angle. Down-the-line and face-on views each answer different questions.
- Pick one checkpoint. Swing path, head movement, setup line, shaft plane, or impact position is enough.
- Draw the reference. Use a line, circle, or angle so the change is visible.
- Add a note. Record the drill, club, ball flight, or feel while you still remember it.
- Compare later. Put the old and new swings together only when the camera angle is close enough to be fair.
Where AI can help and where it cannot
AI-assisted visual checks can help surface movement and make review faster. They should not replace judgment, coaching, or your own context from the session. The safest use is to combine AI visual cues with simple markup and notes.
Why SwingDraw stays focused
SwingDraw is for golfers who want clearer practice evidence. It does not require a subscription, does not add ads, and does not try to turn every swing into a lesson plan. You keep the video, the annotations, and the context in one place.