Mission
Disc information today is fragmented across manufacturer pages, retailer listings, scattered Reddit threads, and YouTube reviews. Discpedia exists to consolidate that information into a single, trustworthy, community-editable reference — the kind of resource we wished existed when we started playing.
How community flight stats work
Every disc page shows two sets of flight numbers:
- Manufacturer-published. The numbers the brand prints on the disc or publishes on its product page. These are unchanged unless the manufacturer revises them.
- Community-averaged. Crowd-sourced from registered users who log their real-world flight observations on each disc — across plastics, weights, age of disc, and conditions.
Community values are not a replacement for manufacturer numbers — they're a complement. Knowing both lets you choose discs based on how they actually fly for real throwers, rather than only what the marketing says.
Editorial model
Disc pages on Discpedia can be edited by registered users. Every edit is reviewed, every claim should be backed by evidence (manufacturer specs, PDGA approval data, video review timestamps, community consensus), and contentious changes are discussed before merging.
Trademark notice
Disc names, plastic blend names, and manufacturer marks are trademarks of their respective owners. Discpedia uses them under editorial fair use for the purpose of review, comparison, and reference. Discpedia is not affiliated with or endorsed by any disc manufacturer.
Get involved
Discpedia is currently an MVP. If you'd like to contribute, suggest a disc page, or report incorrect data, we'd love to hear from you.