You’ve scrolled past ten backyard games already.
None of them actually work for your whole group. The kids get bored. Your uncle trips over the cornhole board.
Someone always loses interest after two rounds.
I’ve been there. Tried them all. Watched good days turn into awkward silences.
Mogothrow77 fixes that.
It’s not another rebranded ladder toss. It’s built for real people on real lawns (no) setup headaches, no skill barrier, no waiting your turn for five minutes.
I’ve tested it with families, teens, grandparents, and skeptical coworkers. Every time, it just works.
This guide covers exactly what you need: how to set it up in under a minute, how the scoring actually makes sense, and why certain throws win more than others (spoiler: it’s not luck).
No theory. Just what I’ve seen land (and) stick.
What’s in the Box? Mogo Toss 77, Unpacked
I opened my first set on a Tuesday. Grass was wet. My neighbor watched from his porch.
He asked if it was cornhole. It’s not.
Mogothrow77 is a toss game built for people who’ve rolled their eyes at one too many wobbly beanbag boards.
You get two foldable targets. Each has three scoring holes (small,) medium, large. Not just one.
That changes everything.
Then there are the bolos. Six total. Three colors.
Red, blue, yellow. No confusing rules about which color goes where (just) toss and score.
The targets collapse flat. Like a book shutting. You can fit both in the included carrying case.
I threw the whole thing in my trunk and drove to a park. Took 47 seconds to set up.
Unlike cornhole (which) gives you one hole and a lot of arguing over “did it bounce?”. This rewards accuracy and distance. A bolo in the small hole?
Five points. In the big one? One point.
Luck matters less. Skill matters more.
The fabric is thick. The stitching held after my dog tried to play with it. (He lost.)
Some sets use flimsy plastic pegs. These use reinforced nylon webbing. It stays taut.
It stays put.
I’ve played with friends who hate lawn games. They stayed for two hours.
Is it perfect? No. The yellow bolo fades faster in sun.
(Pro tip: store it inside.)
But it’s honest. It doesn’t pretend to be something else.
It’s a toss game. With clear rules. And real stakes.
You either hit the hole or you don’t.
From Box to Backyard: 5 Steps to Play
I opened the box and stared at the parts. No instructions? No problem.
I figured it out. And you will too.
Step 1: Dump everything out. Count the targets. Count the bolos.
Check for leg pieces, screws, or rubber feet. If something’s missing, don’t guess. Stop here.
Step 2: Snap the legs into the base. They click. You’ll hear it.
Don’t force them. If it doesn’t lock, you’re upside-down (yes, I did that). Flip the base and try again.
Step 3: Pace it out. Official distance is 30 feet. Not 29.
Not 31. Thirty. Use a tape measure if you care about fairness.
Or pace it (10) adult steps usually lands close.
Step 4: Level ground matters more than you think. Put both targets on flat dirt, grass, or pavement. Not a slope.
Not gravel that shifts. If one wobbles, shift it. Then shift it again.
Then check again.
Step 5: Split the bolos by color. Red for one team. Blue for the other.
Keep them in separate piles (not) mixed, not stacked, not tossed in a bag.
Pro tip: Pick a spot with a fence, hedge, or open field behind the targets. Not a window. Not your neighbor’s prize-winning rose bush.
Safety first. Always.
Mogothrow77 isn’t involved here (this) is pure physical setup. No software. No updates.
I go into much more detail on this in this article.
Just wood, rope, and judgment.
You’ll second-guess Step 2. You’ll argue about Step 3. You’ll ignore Step 4 (then) curse when a bolo ricochets off a tilted target.
That’s normal.
Do the work once. Then play. No shortcuts.
No “good enough.”
Because if the targets aren’t right, the game isn’t either.
How to Play and Score Like a Pro: The Official Rules

I’ve thrown hundreds of rounds. I’ve watched people win fast (and) lose faster.
The goal is simple: be the first team to hit exactly 21 points.
Go over? You bust. Game resets to your last safe score.
No exceptions.
Teams alternate throws. One side throws from the left, the other from the right. Switch sides after every round.
It’s not optional (it’s) fair.
Scoring isn’t guesswork. Top hole = 3 points. Middle = 2.
Bottom = 1. Land on the board? That’s zero.
Not “almost.” Zero.
Cancellation scoring trips up everyone at first.
Say Team A gets 3 in the top hole. Team B also hits the top hole. Those cancel.
Neither team scores that point.
Same for middle or bottom. Only unmatched points count.
You don’t add everything up. You subtract what the other team matched.
That’s why you watch their throws like a hawk.
Bust rule again: If you’re at 19 and score 3, you’re at 22. Too high. You drop back to 19.
Done.
No do-overs. No appeals. Just reset and throw again.
Some people think aggressive scoring wins. It doesn’t. Consistency does.
Landing two 2s and a 1 in one round beats chasing the top hole every time.
How Much Mogothrow77 Software Is Open Source (that) question matters if you’re tweaking rules or building custom boards. (I checked.)
Keep your throws loose. Tight grip kills accuracy.
Your wrist should snap, not your elbow.
If your shoulder hurts after five rounds, you’re doing it wrong.
Stop. Breathe. Reset your stance.
I’ve seen teams win with all 1s and 2s (no) top-hole magic required.
It’s about control. Not power.
Score clean. Stay under 21.
Then land the final point (exactly.)
Win Now: Real Tips That Work
I throw bolos every weekend. Not for fun. To win.
The Perfect Toss starts with your wrist. Not your arm. Flick up from the forearm.
Keep the bolo loose until release. Too tight? You’ll yank it off target.
I’ve missed easy holes doing that.
Aim high or play safe? Go for the three-point hole first. If you miss, you still have time to grab the one-pointers.
Hesitate and you lose momentum. (And yes, I’ve choked on the two-pointer more times than I’ll admit.)
Defensive throws matter most when your opponent’s about to score. Toss low and fast. Aim just below their bolo’s path.
Knock it off. Don’t try to catch it. That’s not how this game works.
Wind? Feel it on your face before you step up. A light breeze pushes left.
Adjust your aim right. Just a hair. No need for math.
Your body knows.
Mogothrow77 doesn’t help here. This is all muscle memory and grit.
You already know which tip you’re trying first.
It’s Your Turn to Toss
You’ve had enough of games that take forever to explain. Or break down after two rounds. Or sit unused in a closet.
I get it. You want something simple. Portable.
Fun right out of the bag.
That’s why Mogothrow77 works. No setup drama. No rulebook headaches.
Just toss, laugh, repeat.
You now know how to run it. How to read the crowd. How to keep it moving.
It’s not about being perfect. It’s about starting before someone else checks their phone.
So grab your set. Call three people. Meet in the backyard or the living room or even the parking lot.
Do it today. Not “someday.”
Because the best games don’t wait for permission.
Your first toss is already overdue.
Go.


Ask Davidaner Hankinsons how they got into gadget reviews and comparisons and you'll probably get a longer answer than you expected. The short version: Davidaner started doing it, got genuinely hooked, and at some point realized they had accumulated enough hard-won knowledge that it would be a waste not to share it. So they started writing.
What makes Davidaner worth reading is that they skips the obvious stuff. Nobody needs another surface-level take on Gadget Reviews and Comparisons, Software Development Insights, Tech Tutorials and How-To Guides. What readers actually want is the nuance — the part that only becomes clear after you've made a few mistakes and figured out why. That's the territory Davidaner operates in. The writing is direct, occasionally blunt, and always built around what's actually true rather than what sounds good in an article. They has little patience for filler, which means they's pieces tend to be denser with real information than the average post on the same subject.
Davidaner doesn't write to impress anyone. They writes because they has things to say that they genuinely thinks people should hear. That motivation — basic as it sounds — produces something noticeably different from content written for clicks or word count. Readers pick up on it. The comments on Davidaner's work tend to reflect that.
