If you've spent any time reading disc golf forums, you've seen this debate. The Innova Destroyer and the Discraft Zeus are the two most-thrown overstable distance drivers in the sport. They share identical published flight numbers — 12 / 5 / -1 / 3 — and serve the same role in a bag. So is there actually a difference, or is brand loyalty doing all the work?
There's a real difference. Here's where each disc wins.
Quick summary
- Destroyer: Slightly more dome-y, more glide-forward, more variation between plastic types. Better for hyzer-flip distance and arms that want help getting maximum carry.
- Zeus: Flatter top, more consistent run-to-run, more wind-resistant out of the box. Better for forehand drives and players who want predictable overstable flight without break-in time.
Feel in hand
The Destroyer has a recognizable Innova dome — most production runs have a noticeable top profile. This shape generates more glide but can feel less precise on flat releases. The Zeus has a flatter top with a more pronounced shoulder, giving it a "flat plate" feel that many forehand throwers prefer.
Rim shape is also distinct. The Destroyer's rim has the classic Innova fast-driver profile — relatively grippy in Star plastic. The Zeus rim, particularly in ESP plastic, has a sharper inside edge that some players love and others find uncomfortable.
On-course flight
This is where the published flight numbers stop telling the full story.
Fresh, max-weight, premium plastic, full-power throw: The Zeus tends to fly slightly more overstable than the Destroyer. A 175g ESP Zeus will hold its line through more wind than a 175g Star Destroyer of the same age. This is partly mold geometry, partly Discraft's ESP plastic running a bit firmer than Innova's Star.
Beat-in, mid-life: The Destroyer beats in predictably. Star Destroyers move from overstable to stable-with-fade in a reasonably linear way, which is why pros bag multiple Destroyers in different stages of beat-in. The Zeus is more resistant to beat-in — it tends to hold its overstability longer, which is a feature or a bug depending on what you want.
Wind: Edge to the Zeus in raw headwind tolerance. Edge to the Destroyer in finesse — turnover lines and hyzer-flip distance are easier with a slightly less overstable disc.
Plastic comparison
Both discs come in many plastics. The most commonly bagged premium runs are:
- Star Destroyer: The all-around standard. Grippy, durable, beats in well.
- Champion Destroyer: Holds overstability longer. Slicker grip.
- ESP Zeus: The McBeth bag standard. Grippy, slightly tacky.
- Big Z Zeus: Translucent, holds overstability longer than ESP. Comparable to Champion in role.
Which one belongs in your bag?
If you already throw Innova: stick with the Destroyer. It will pair more naturally with the rest of an Innova driver lineup (Wraith, Sidewinder, Teebird).
If you already throw Discraft: the Zeus pairs naturally with the Force, Buzzz, and Luna. It also benefits from being McBeth's signature, which means consistent tour series releases and plastic experiments.
If you're building a bag from scratch: throw both. Most pro shops will let you field-test discs, and the choice tends to come down to feel rather than flight in practice.
Next steps
Want to compare these discs side-by-side with overlaid flight paths? Use the comparison tool. If you're still building your driver lineup, our flight numbers guide covers the fundamentals.