How Rebound Physics Works
A bank shot is controlled redirection. Your entry angle and entry speed define where the second touch lands. Most misses come from excess speed, not from choosing the wrong wall. Start with moderate speed, then increase only after your rebound depth is consistent.
Wall Angle Examples You Can Practice
- Soft Bank: Shallow entry for lane adjustment without large trajectory change.
- Mid Bank: Standard redirection for blocked direct routes.
- Hard Bank: Steep angle for emergency recoveries; high variance and risk.
Practical rule: if your second contact is too deep, lower power before changing angle. If your rebound lane is correct but distance is short, increase power in small steps.
Map Recommendations
- Forest maps: Great for learning because wall geometry is readable and forgiving.
- Desert maps: Add wind compensation early. Tailwind exaggerates rebound distance.
- Urban maps: Useful for double-bank rehearsals under tight windows.
Wind-Aware Bank Shot Checklist
- Set a baseline bank route with no wind compensation.
- Apply small angle offset in crosswind maps.
- Reduce power slightly in tailwind before flattening angle.
- Track bounce count; fewer bounces means higher reliability.
Visual Practice
Add a GIF or screenshot sequence here from your simulator to show a good bank line versus an overshoot line. Visual examples improve dwell time and help users copy practical timing patterns.
Test these routes directly in-browser: Open the Super Battle Golf trajectory calculator.