Story highlights Ground-breaking new golf course under construction at Mission Hills in China

It will incorporate traditional golf with aspects of crazy or mini golf

One of the holes has an 80-meter wide noodle bowl and giant chop sticks

Designers believe it could spark a new trend in China and wider market

It's crazy golf on an insane scale -- a putting green swimming in a giant bowl of noodles and chopsticks, the Great Wall of China for a hazard, a fairway threading through Mayan ruins and a panda-themed hole.

China is getting into golf in a big way ahead of the sport's reintroduction to the Olympics in 2016, and even its take on the mini version of the game is larger than life.

"Traditionalists will probably hate it," says design guru Brian Curley, principal partner in Schmidt-Curley, the company behind the 22 courses that make up the Mission Hills complex in Hainan Island.

"But this is real golf, with real clubs on real fairways," he told CNN.

Just about everyone has tried their hand at crazy or mini-golf, a scale-down variant of the game which has the ability to delight and infuriate in equal measure.

Usually situated at seaside resorts or other leisure locations, the prerequisites for success are a modicum of actual golfing skill, the ability to putt in a straight line or at unlikely angles off prominent obstacles -- and a large slice of luck.

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Photos: Duel at Jinsha Lake Photos: Duel at Jinsha Lake Golden Gong – Rory McIlroy and Tiger Woods look on in amusement before banging a ceremonial gong to mark the start of their "Duel at Jinsha Lake." Hide Caption 1 of 11 Photos: Duel at Jinsha Lake Tiger Paw – Both McIlroy and Woods, pictured above, had their handprints immortalized in clay as a lavish ceremony featuring drum majorettes and fireworks preceded their clash in the Chinese city Zhengzhou. Hide Caption 2 of 11 Photos: Duel at Jinsha Lake Number One – World No. 1 McIlroy cannot keep a straight face as the players pose at the first green, ahead of a clash reported to be paying the pair a combined total of $2 million. Hide Caption 3 of 11 Photos: Duel at Jinsha Lake "Barely-controlled chaos" – "The scene was barely-controlled chaos," wrote Sports Illustrated's Alan Shipnuck . "Some 3,000 fans streamed across the fairways, with soldiers locking arms in a human fence to keep the throngs off the greens." Hide Caption 4 of 11 Photos: Duel at Jinsha Lake High Jinks – A course marshall practices kung fu as she awaits the golfers' arrival. Hide Caption 5 of 11 Photos: Duel at Jinsha Lake Firing Line – "On the tee boxes there were so many camera clicks it sounded like machine gun fire," Shipnuck wrote. Hide Caption 6 of 11 Photos: Duel at Jinsha Lake Model Display – Local golf fans talk with one of the models who inhabited the greens in their evening wear in scenes seldom seen on any golf course. Hide Caption 7 of 11 Photos: Duel at Jinsha Lake Water Hazard – Woods tries to maintain focus as a luxury boat passes by, with the clubhouse car park also boasting a collection of Rolls-Royces, Ferraris, Aston Martins and Maseratis. Hide Caption 8 of 11 Photos: Duel at Jinsha Lake Next Generation? – Young fans show their support for McIlroy and Woods in a country that is seen as the next great market for golf to conquer. Hide Caption 9 of 11 Photos: Duel at Jinsha Lake On the Charge – McIlroy never trailed Woods after starting with a birdie, going on to card a five-under-par 67 -- one less than the world No. 2. Hide Caption 10 of 11 Photos: Duel at Jinsha Lake Job Done – McIlroy awaits his trophy on a day that coincided with the launch of the multi-million-dollar "Golf Villas" to be built around the Jinsha Lake course. Hide Caption 11 of 11

President Barack Obama, who takes every opportunity to hit the fairways when not leading the Western world, even tried his hand at crazy golf while on holiday with his family in Florida in 2010.

Making a par on his opening hole, he then had to watch as his nine-year-old daugher Sasha made a hole in one, besting her dad in front of the gathered ranks of the world's media.

Obama might well be tempted to put his handicap on the line at the ground-breaking new course being constructed at Curley's Mission Hills Haikou development.

Combining the wacky elements of mini-golf with the "grown-up" version of the game, the proposed 18-hole layout would leave little chance of aces by nine-year-olds -- but still plenty of chances of humiliation for the average golfer.

Fantasy golf

Mindful of the impression that there is a "sameness" to the courses being churned out in their droves in the fastest expanding golf market in the world, Curley and his team wanted to come up with something that he felt would appeal to the wider Chinese public and other visitors to the resort.

So instead of bunkers, rough and trees, the players will be faced with a replica of the Great Wall of China winding its way the length of a 400-meter par four hole.

It also has a hole to rival the infamous "island green" seen at TPC Sawgrass in Florida, home of the the U.S. PGA Tour's Players Championship.

That tricky 17th sees the best in the world attempt to hit their ball onto a tiny green surrounded by water, and spectators delight in seeing the likes of Tiger Woods find the lake.

At Mission Hills' new course, set to open in 2014, the water is replaced by an 80-meter wide noodle bowl with 50-meter giant chopsticks.

Photos: Golf's young prodigies Photos: Golf's young prodigies History maker – Fifteen-year-old Lydia Ko is the youngest LPGA Tour winner in history courtesy of her win at the Canadian Women's Open. She was just 14 when she triumphed at the the New South Wales Open in January 2012, becoming the youngest player to win a professional tournament. She clinched the U.S. Amateur Championship two weeks ago. Hide Caption 1 of 6 Photos: Golf's young prodigies Golf's young prodigies – Guan Tian-Lang, 13, made history as the youngest player at a European Tour event when he teed off at his home China Open in April 2012. Hide Caption 2 of 6 Photos: Golf's young prodigies Making the cut – However, he could not better the achievement of Jason Hak, who was 14 when he became the youngest player to make the halfway cut at a European Tour event at the 2008 Hong Kong Open. Hide Caption 3 of 6 Photos: Golf's young prodigies The future star – Japan's Ryo Ishikawa is the youngest male player to win a professional tournament. He was 15 when he triumphed at the Munsingwear Open in 2007, and has since gone on to become a top-level tour competitor. Hide Caption 4 of 6 Photos: Golf's young prodigies Young gun – Before Ko, Lexi Thompson was the youngest player to win on the women's LPGA Tour. The American was 16 when she triumphed at the LPGA Classic in Prattville, Alabama in September 2011. Hide Caption 5 of 6 Photos: Golf's young prodigies Dubai double – Thompson is the youngest player to win on the European Ladies' Tour. Here she receives her trophy at the Dubai Ladies Masters on December 17, 2011. Hide Caption 6 of 6

Photos: Golf's best coaches Photos: Golf's best coaches Instructor to the stars – David Leadbetter is recognized as one of the world's leading golf instructors, and has worked with stars such as Nick Faldo, Nick Price, Ernie Els and Greg Norman. Hide Caption 1 of 10 Photos: Golf's best coaches Top teacher – Seen here with former child prodigy Michelle Wie in 2010, Leadbetter has established coaching academies around the world. Hide Caption 2 of 10 Photos: Golf's best coaches Teaching the world – Leadbetter's golf empire has grown from his main academy in Florida to locations all around the world. Hide Caption 3 of 10 Photos: Golf's best coaches Reaping the rewards – He says he has scaled back his on-tour coaching these days, but does a lot of corporate work and writing. Hide Caption 4 of 10 Photos: Golf's best coaches Tiger's tutor – Butch Harmon made his name coaching Tiger Woods. Here he guides Woods during the 1995 Masters -- two years before his breakthrough victory at Augusta. Hide Caption 5 of 10 Photos: Golf's best coaches 'Lefty' learns – After splitting with Woods in 2004, Harmon linked up with the former world No. 1's greatest rival Phil Mickelson three years later. Hide Caption 6 of 10 Photos: Golf's best coaches Haney's help – Woods spent six years with coach Hank Haney, seen here teaching a young Chinese golfer at the launch of his academy at China's Mission Hills Hainan in Haikou in 2010. Hide Caption 7 of 10 Photos: Golf's best coaches Europe's finest – Pete Cowen, seen here coaching fellow Englishman Simon Dyson, has been at the forefront of Europe's recent golfing dominance. Hide Caption 8 of 10 Photos: Golf's best coaches Coaching Clarke – Cowen has long worked with Darren Clarke, who finally won his first major title at this year's British Open. Hide Caption 9 of 10 Photos: Golf's best coaches The next Tiger? – Cowen has also helped Clarke's fellow Northern Irishman Rory McIlroy, who this year claimed his first major triumph at the U.S. Open. Hide Caption 10 of 10

Standing on the tee, players will not know whether to laugh or cry, and the degree of difficulty may not end there.

Wind machine

Curley is promising the addition of "man made" gale force winds on each tee, adjustable depending on the standards of the players and available by hitting a red button.

There is a par-5 threading its way through Mayan ruins, while another green is created in the image of the "Birds Nest" Olympic Stadium in Beijing. Another hole is styled after China's favorite animal, the panda bear.

On a conventional golf course, the degree of difficulty is often dictated by which tee the player chooses to play from. Leading professionals play from the tees furthest from the hole, while higher handicappers can opt to hit their first shot from much closer.

On the Chinese fantasy course, one of the par-3s will give golfers the choice of hitting their ball onto a tiny green surrounded by lava rocks.

In true mini-golf fashion, the other easier option at the volcano theme hole will let players hit towards a mound from which the ball will be whisked nearer the hole down a pipe.

Curley and his team needed the permission of the owners of the complex before committing to the costly project, but Mission Hills' chairman Dr. Ken Chu is an enthusiastic backer.

"This will be a fun alternative for families, novices and children on holiday," he was quoted in the Asian edition of Golf Course Industry International.

Only time will tell if Chu's faith in the project proves founded, but the Mission Hills group has already established itself as a host venue of leading professional tournaments.

Last year the Hainan Island development staged the World Cup teams event for the first time, taking over from the Mission Hills complex at Shenzhen.

This year Shenzhen was the venue of the prestigious HSBC-World Golf Championship event, won by Englishman Ian Poulter.

The Ryder Cup hero conquered the conventional bunker-bound Olazabal course in 21 under par, but knowing Poulter's reputation as a golfing trendsetter, he will probably be itching to test his mettle on Curley's new wacky creation at the first opportunity.