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What is Mullys?
(in real golfer language)


What is Mullys?
Mullys has two core products, both in 2 oz shots that fit in your valuables pocket next to your tees and ego.
Range Finder
Think of this as your “lock in” shot. It is a nootropic and mushroom blend with Lion’s Mane, L-theanine, and electrolytes. No caffeine, no alcohol. You drink it before or early in the round to help with focus and calm energy.
Loose Juice
This is the fun one. A grape, Transfusion-inspired wellness shot with a low dose of hemp-derived THC. No alcohol, fast acting, designed for mellow, social, “let’s enjoy this walk” vibes, not “I am stuck to the couch” vibes.
Both are built for golf. Short rounds, long walks, 5-hour scrambles, whatever your situation. One to sharpen the brain, one to soften the edges.
If you remember nothing else, remember this:
Range Finder is for your swing.
Loose Juice is for your vibe.
Why golf needed something like this
Let’s be honest about how most of us currently play:
You show up a bit wired from coffee or work.
You grab a beer on the first or second tee “to loosen up.”
By hole 7, you are a little dehydrated, a little buzzed, and your decision-making goes out the window.
Somewhere on the back nine, you hit that one swing out of nowhere that makes you think, “Imagine if I took care of my body.”
Mullys is basically asking a simple question:
What if the drink in your hand actually helped your round instead of sabotaging it?
For competitive amateurs, that is not a small thing. Your nervous system, your breathing, your ability to stay present over the ball, all of that determines whether your 74 turns into a 78.
I don’t think Mullys is magic. You still have to make the swing. But it is definitely a more innovative tool than pounding light beer in the desert heat and pretending that it is “hydration.”
My on-course test: one round, two shots, zero hangover
I tested Mullys on a twilight round, walking, the way golf should be played in Phoenix once the sun drops behind the houses.
Holes 1–4: Range Finder in the warm-up
I took Range Finder on the range, about 15 minutes before teeing off.
What I noticed:
My brain felt a little quieter, but not dull.
I could stay in my pre-shot routine without drifting into the usual “what if I block this into the road” spiral.
Tempo felt more repeatable. I wasn’t rushing at the top like I sometimes do when caffeine and nerves tag-team my swing.
Did it magically give me a tour swing? No. But it was the same feeling as an excellent meditation session, just bottled at 2 oz.
This is the key difference: you are not chasing hype or jitters. You are chasing clarity.
Holes 6–12: Loose Juice at the turn
I took Loose Juice around the turn, walking off the 6th green.
Two things hit me pretty quickly:
I felt noticeably more relaxed over the ball, especially on tee shots where I usually force it.
The round felt more “fun” without crossing into goofy or careless.
If you have ever had “just enough” alcohol to loosen up without tipping over the edge, it is that same zone, just cleaner. No heavy stomach, no sugary crash.
I birdied one, bogeyed one, and hit a couple of very calm, committed iron shots from 170 that told me my brain was finally getting out of the way.
Will that happen every round? No. But I can say this: Loose Juice made it easier to treat each shot like its own thing instead of carrying frustration between holes.

Three simple ways to use Mullys in your routine
If you are going to experiment with Mullys, treat it like your equipment. There is a right place and a wrong place for everything.
1. Tournament days: Range Finder only
If you are playing a serious event, I would stick to a Range Finder.
Take it on the putting green or range.
Use it to build a calm, consistent routine.
Pair it with water and a light snack.
You are not trying to “feel something.” You are trying to take a little noise out of your mental game. That is where Range Finder earns its spot.
2. Twilight nine with the crew: Range Finder + Loose Juice
This is where the full Mullys combo shines.
Hole 1–3: Range Finder to settle in after work.
Hole 5–7: Loose Juice to keep the mood light and smooth as the sun drops.
You are playing music, talking trash, and still actually trying to shoot a number. Mullys is built for exactly that lane.
3. Scrambles, skins games, and “social golf”
If you are hosting or playing in a fun event, Loose Juice becomes part of the experience.
Beat the setting sun vibes.
Keep everyone off the hard liquor train.
Give the non-drinkers something that feels special, not like a pity Sprite.
If you are running events with The Cactus Club, this is where I see Mullys integrating really nicely. Responsible, modern, and built for people who want to enjoy the night and still wake up for work or another tee time.
Who Mullys is for (and who it is not for)
Mullys is an excellent fit if you:
Are a 0–15 handicap who wants to protect your game while still enjoying the social side of golf.
Are you trying to cut back on alcohol but still want something that feels like a treat?
Care about how your body feels on the back nine, not just the first tee.
Enjoy low-dose THC responsibly, and you are in a place where it is legal.
Mullys is probably not for you if you:
Want to get obliterated. That is not the point here.
Hate the idea of any THC at all. In that case, stick with Range Finder, or skip entirely.
They are playing at a venue that does not allow these kinds of products. Always check your local laws and course rules.
Plan to drive right after a couple of shots. You still need to treat THC with respect, even at low doses.
Quick responsible reminder: never mix Mullys with heavy alcohol, do not drive impaired, and always start with less to see how your body reacts.
Why I think Mullys belongs in a modern golfer’s bag
Golf is in the middle of a culture reset.
You see it at Encanto, at muni tracks across Phoenix, at the Grass League events: younger players, more diverse groups, different music, different fashion, different expectations.
Our drinks should catch up too.
Here is what Mullys gets right:
It respects your game. These are not products designed to wreck your swing and sell you more refills. They are built around focus, calm, and feeling.
It respects your health. No alcohol, low calories, clean ingredients, short labels. This is not a chemical soup.
It respects the culture. The flavors, the naming, the tone, it all feels like it came from people who actually log rounds, not an ad agency guessing from the outside.
Could you keep pounding beers instead? Sure. Could you white-knuckle every round on caffeine and anxiety alone? Also yes.
Or you could treat your body, your brain, and your golf like they matter and experiment with a drink that is actually designed for the walk you love.
How to try Mullys for yourself
If you are curious, here is how I would test it:
Start with a mixed pack. Get both Range Finder and Loose Juice so you can feel the difference in their roles.
Pick a low-stakes round. Twilight nine, weekend match with friends, anything where the money and pressure are not wild.
Use one at a time first. Round 1, try only the Range Finder. Round 2, try only Loose Juice. See what actually changes for you.
Pay attention. Notice your focus, your tempo, your patience after a bad shot, and how you feel when you wake up the next morning.
Then decide. If it helps, keep it in the bag. If it doesn’t, at least you made an informed call instead of guessing from the sideline.
If you want to support founders building cool stuff inside golf, not just around it, Mullys is precisely the kind of brand you're looking for.
Your wedges, your putter, your mental game, your hydration, your headspace, it all stacks.
Mullys will not turn a 12 into a scratch overnight. But it might help you play the golf you are already capable of, with a little more calm, a little more clarity, and a lot more fun.
And honestly, that is the whole point.
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