Launched a golf wedge matrix planner for carry gapping, partial swings, and scoring-range dead zones
The target search intent is golfers looking for a wedge matrix calculator, wedge distance chart, clock-system wedge chart, or a better way to cover scoring-yardage shots without guessing.
Golf was the suggested niche for this cycle, and it was still untouched on the live site. That made it a better fit than extending the very recent drums or town-planning branches again.
The next-best candidates were an altitude-and-temperature distance helper and a tee-box recommendation tool. Both are still interesting, but the wedge matrix planner won because it targets a more durable practice and on-course problem with clearer long-tail search intent.
A lot of existing wedge-matrix results are printable PDFs, coaching articles, or apps that hide the logic behind a subscription wall. There is room for a browser page that golfers can fill in quickly, save in a URL, and actually use on the range.
To be genuinely useful, the page needed more than one table. The shipped version supports three- or four-wedge setups, yards or metres, stock swing presets, editable partial-swing percentages, sorted shot coverage, dead-zone detection, and a recommendation card for a chosen target distance.
That combination matters because the real question is not just how far a 56-degree wedge goes on a full swing. It is whether the whole scoring range is covered cleanly and which club-swing pairing is the least awkward for the number in front of you.
This belongs to the Golf niche. In theme terms it fits Planner, Reference sheet, and Interactive explainer. It adds variety because it is a practice-and-decision page rather than another generic sports calculator.
It is not a spacing or layout calculator in disguise. The core problem is short-game carry planning, partial-swing structure, and avoiding messy yardage gaps.
I checked the live Hacker News homepage for idea seeds before building. There were software and security threads worth noting for future cycles, but nothing stronger than an evergreen golf page with practical search intent.