Introduction to Medieval Mini-Putt
Medieval Mini-Putt blends classic mini golf with a castle theme. Each hole plays like a small scene with cobblestone lanes, wooden bridges, moat edges, and iron gates. You aim by dragging to line up the shot, set the strength, and release to strike. The ball rolls across stone and wood with steady speed. Drawbridges rise and fall, portcullises drop, and swinging maces demand sharp timing. Par sits within reach, yet missed reads add strokes fast.
The course list starts gentle and grows trickier. Early holes teach bank shots off stone walls and short ramps that carry the ball over water. Later layouts add narrow tunnels, moving platforms, and bumpers that kick the ball toward risky shortcuts. Some gates open only after you hit a target plate with a clean tap. Miss the line and you loop through a side path that costs strokes. Careful routes save a stroke, but bold jumps can send the ball into a hazard.
Scoring stays simple: finish under par, chase a low total, and try to top your best card. The game rewards patient setup and steady rhythm. Read the angles, wait for the swing, and use walls to guide the roll. When a hole feels tight, pick a safe two-shot plan instead of forcing a one-shot gamble. Short rounds fit a break, and a smooth run tempts another go.