Given that there is an element of luck involved in every respect my answer is "none of them" !
Fun to play, but as a fair test of golf I would say not the right thing... IMHO
What defines a "test of golf"?
Is knowing the course not a "test of golf"
Is being able to line up and execute a shot with a target in the mind's eye only-- not a "test of golf"?
Shouldn't a player have to choose between rough and fairway occasionally in order to get a preferred look or angle?
Shouldn't a player gain an advantage by playing a creative run up shot into a green running hard away from him?(despite the fact that he subjects himself to possible "bad luck" on firm but somewhat inconsistent turf.)
Isn't it a skill to recover successfully after such bad luck?
I played a nine hole course yesterday(twice) which has 8-9 blind shots and is quite firm.
Yet only one ball was lost (mine
) and we all knew it was not a good drive and that with the slope of the terrain that it most likely run into trouble
Losing the ball was bad execution, not "bad luck"
We played with a mid level handicapper who hit it where we told him to, he embraced the course and he played quite well.
Every ball hit ended up just about where we expected it to(the course wasn't quite as firm as usual so I had to adjust my advice and my own play accordingly.)
Would you want to date a woman who you knew everything about in the first 30 seconds?
This is why PGA tour golf is so freaking boring.....
we spend multimillions building long,huge hard courses embracing the "all out in front of you --look hard-play easy"mantra(for the pros not the schlubs) to show whose di#$% is biggest..... then we make sure they're "fair"...
When we start determining champions on courses that are fun and challenge the mind as well, then perhaps golf can find its' way back from the new dark age where greens have to stimp at 13(with the requisite fair flat pin placements), bunkers have to be "fair", and ROUGH has to be the proper strain of bermuda so it's fair and predictable