Discpedia Blog
Guides, comparisons, and deep dives on disc golf gear.
How to Read Disc Golf Flight Numbers (The Complete Guide)
A plain-English guide to disc golf's 4-number flight rating system: Speed, Glide, Turn, and Fade. Learn what each number actually means for how a disc flies — and how the system breaks down in practice.
What Is 'Turn' in Disc Golf? A Plain-English Guide
Turn is the third number in disc golf flight ratings — it describes how much a disc banks right during the high-speed phase of its flight (for a right-handed backhand thrower). Here's how to read it, what it means in practice, and where the rating breaks down.
What Is 'Fade' in Disc Golf? A Plain-English Guide
Fade is the fourth number in disc golf flight ratings — it describes how strongly a disc finishes left as it slows down (for a right-handed backhand thrower). Here's how to read fade ratings, when fade matters, and why community values often disagree with published ones.
What Is 'Glide' in Disc Golf? A Plain-English Guide
Glide is the second number in disc golf flight ratings — it describes how well a disc resists falling out of the air. Higher glide generally means more distance, but it's the loosest of the four ratings. Here's how to read it.
What Is 'Speed' in Disc Golf? A Plain-English Guide
Speed is the first number in disc golf flight ratings — it describes how fast a disc needs to be thrown to fly as intended. The 1-14 scale is largely a proxy for rim width. Here's how to read it and why higher speed doesn't mean more distance.
Understable vs Overstable: Disc Golf Stability Explained
Overstable discs resist turning right under power and fade hard left. Understable discs turn right easily and barely fade. Here's the technical distinction, why power level changes a disc's stability, and how to pick the right bag mix for your skill level.
Why Does My Disc Fade Left? Causes and Fixes
If your disc consistently finishes hard left, it's almost always one of three things: the disc is too overstable for your power, you're releasing on hyzer, or you're under-throwing. Here's how to diagnose and fix each.
Disc Golf Plastics Explained: Every Major Blend
Every disc golf disc is sold in multiple plastic blends. Understanding plastic is the second most important skill in disc selection, after flight numbers. Here's what each major manufacturer's plastics mean and how they affect flight, grip, and durability.
Champion vs Star Plastic: Which Innova Premium Is Right for You?
Champion and Star are Innova's two flagship premium plastics — same molds, same flight numbers, but they fly noticeably different. Champion is harder, slicker, and holds overstability longer. Star is grippier and beats in faster.
Discraft ESP vs Z Plastic: Which Premium Blend Belongs in Your Bag?
ESP and Z are Discraft's two flagship throwing plastics — same molds, same flight numbers, but they feel and age very differently. ESP is grippier and beats in faster. Z is firmer, slicker, and holds its flight character longer. Here's how to choose between them.
Best Understable Midrange Discs for Beginners (2026)
If you're new to disc golf and your midrange fades out too early, you probably need an understable midrange. We rank the five best beginner-friendly options and explain why each works for developing arms.
What to Buy as a Beginner in Disc Golf (2026 Starter Guide)
New to disc golf and not sure what to buy? You need just three understable discs — a putter, a midrange, and a fairway driver — in a 150–165g weight. Here's exactly which discs to buy, what to skip, and what it costs.
Best Discs for Tunnel Shots and Wooded Courses
The best discs for tunnel shots and wooded courses are accurate, lower-speed control discs that fly straight with a predictable finish. We rank the best midranges, fairway drivers, and approach discs for tight, tree-lined fairways.
Innova vs Discraft: The Complete Brand Comparison
Innova and Discraft are the two biggest names in disc golf. This is the complete comparison — flagship molds, plastic blends, flight-rating philosophy, and which brand fits your game.
Innova Destroyer vs Discraft Zeus: Distance Driver Showdown
Both have identical flight numbers (12/5/-1/3). Both are flagship overstable distance drivers from rival brands. So which one belongs in your bag? We break down the real on-course differences.
Innova Wraith vs Destroyer: Which Distance Driver Should You Bag?
The Wraith and Destroyer are two of the most popular distance drivers ever made — same brand, almost identical flight numbers. The Wraith is the 11-speed; the Destroyer is the 12-speed. The choice is less about flight and more about your arm speed.
Discraft Buzzz vs Innova Roc3: The Midrange Showdown
The Buzzz and Roc3 are arguably the two most popular midranges in disc golf — two competing approaches to the same role. The Buzzz is straight and trusted; the Roc3 is overstable and dependable. Here's which one belongs in your bag.
Innova Aviar vs Dynamic Discs Judge: Putter Comparison
The Aviar and the Judge are two of the most-bagged putters in disc golf, and on paper they look almost identical. The real difference is feel: the Judge sits deeper in the hand with a pronounced bead, while the Aviar is the slimmer original. Here's how to choose.
Discraft Force vs Innova Destroyer: Which Overstable Driver?
The Force and the Destroyer are both 12-speed overstable distance drivers, but they aren't the same disc. The Force (12/5/0/3) is the forehand and headwind specialist; the Destroyer (12/5/-1/3) is the versatile all-arounder that beats in predictably. Here's how to choose.
Discraft Luna vs Innova Aviar: Approach Putter Comparison
The Luna and the Aviar are both putt-and-approach discs, but they aren't rivals for the same job. The Aviar (2/3/0/1) is the straight, neutral best-seller built for putting; the Luna (3/3/0/3) is the overstable wind-fighter and forehand approach disc. Here's which one belongs in your bag.
Latitude 64 Ballista Pro vs Innova Destroyer: Which Distance Driver?
The Ballista Pro and the Destroyer are both overstable distance drivers, but they sit a full speed class apart. The Ballista Pro (14/4/0/3) is the faster, more demanding wind-and-forehand bomber; the Destroyer (12/5/-1/3) is the versatile all-arounder that beats in predictably. Here's how to choose.
Innova Mako3 vs Discraft Buzzz: Straight Midrange Battle
The Mako3 (5/5/0/0) and the Buzzz (5/4/-1/1) are the two most reached-for straight midranges in disc golf. The Mako3 is the purer laser-line disc; the Buzzz is the more shapeable all-rounder with a touch of turn and fade. Here's how to choose.