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Pangya: Excel

In the context of the golf simulation game , "Excel" usually refers to community-created calculators spreadsheets

Pangya Excel

Tomahawk (special shot) formulas are the most complex. They require a "pitch coefficient" that changes based on course altitude. sheets contain massive lookup tables for every course (Blue Water, Ice Spa, Silvia Cannon, etc.) to give you the exact "Power %" for an Albatross or Hole-in-One. Pangya Excel

Specialized formulas exist for power shots like the "Tomahawk" or "Cobra," which ignore certain ground roll behaviors but are heavily influenced by specific club-dependent multipliers. Power Bars (PB): In the context of the golf simulation game

In Pangya , success depends on hitting the “Pangya” zone—a tiny perfect-impact point on a swinging meter. But even after mastering that timing, players face environmental variables: wind speed, wind angle, lie slope, and distance to the pin. A single miscalculation sends the ball into a bunker or water hazard. This is where Excel becomes the secret weapon. By recording hundreds of shots under different conditions, a player can build regression models to predict exact distance loss or gain per unit of wind. A spreadsheet might show: Headwind of 5 m/s at 30 degrees reduces a 230-yard driver by 12.4 yards, but only 8.1 yards if backspin is applied. Specialized formulas exist for power shots like the

If you don't have an Excel sheet open, here are the general rules the calculators use: