Latitude 64 Ballista Flight Chart The Latitude 64 Ballista is a very fast distance driver with flight numbers 14 | 5 | -1 | 3. It’s built for big carries: a touch of high-speed turn that flips to flat and rides on ample glide before a confident finish. In Opto, Gold, and lightweight Opto Air runs, the Ballista rewards arm speed while staying predictable for developing power throwers. Flight Path for Newer Arms If your max throw is still building, expect a straight-to-hyzer flight with limited turn (RHBH). Use slight anhyzer to stretch distance. Opto Air can help you access the intended flight path at lower power. Launch Window for…
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Ogopogo
Daredevil Ogopogo Flight Chart The Daredevil Ogopogo lists flight numbers of 9 | 4 | -2 | 5. Built as a wind-ready driver with a heavy, predictable finish, the Ogopogo is most often molded in Daredevil’s ultra-soft Elastic Performance (EP) plastic, which helps it land “drop & stop” with minimal skips or rollaways. It’s a control-first driver that suits intermediate and advanced players who need spike hyzers, steep approaches, and utility lines to sit where they land. What Newer Players Will See At low power, expect brief high-speed turn followed by a strong fade (RHBH). It’s a confidence piece for headwinds and hyzer training, but distance will be limited compared…
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Mammoth
Daredevil Mammoth Flight Chart The Daredevil Mammoth carries flight numbers of 9 | 4 | -1 | 5. It’s a very overstable control driver built for headwinds, force-over lines, and spike hyzers. With a 2.0 cm rim and dependable fade, the Mammoth favors placement-first drives and confident forehands where you need a hard finish and skip control. What Beginners Can Expect Newer players will see a quick, reliable fade even on flat releases. Use the Mammoth to learn hyzer angles, fight wind, and keep throws from overturning. It’s more about control than raw distance at low power. Flight Chart Notes for Intermediates Intermediate arms can lean on the Mammoth for…
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Buffalo
Daredevil Buffalo Flight Chart The Daredevil Buffalo lists flight numbers of 9 | 4 | -1 | 5. This very overstable control driver is built for wind-fighting confidence, spiky finishes, and dependable placement. With a 2.0 cm rim and lower dome, it favors controlled power lines, forehand reliability, and utility shots where a hard fade is required. Beginner Expectations: Buffalo Flight Path Newer players will see a strong left finish (RHBH). Even on flat releases, the Buffalo resists turn and fades out early. Use it to learn hyzer angles, fight headwinds, and keep drives from overturning. Intermediate Lines & Course Work Intermediates can lean on the Buffalo for headwind drives,…
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Outlaw
Legacy Outlaw Flight Chart The Legacy Outlaw is a powerful distance driver built for long, controlled flights with a reliable finish. Featuring flight numbers of 12 | 5 | -1 | 3, the Outlaw delivers maximum distance for players with strong arms while maintaining a dependable fade at the end of its flight. Designed as Legacy’s answer to the Destroyer, this high-speed driver balances speed, glide, and control—making it an excellent choice for players who want distance without sacrificing accuracy. Flight Characteristics and Overview The Outlaw is known for its smooth release and workable stability. At high speeds, it offers a touch of turn followed by a strong, consistent fade,…
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Wei
Yikun Wei Flight Chart The Yikun Wei is a powerful distance driver built for control and predictable distance. With flight numbers of 12 | 5 | -1 | 3, the Wei delivers long S-curve flights with dependable fade at the end. Its wide rim, strong glide, and torque resistance make it an excellent choice for players who want a disc that can handle power while maintaining accuracy and consistency. Flight Characteristics and Overview The Wei’s flight path is stable with a gentle high-speed turn and strong, reliable fade. It can be trusted for distance shots in varying wind conditions and is designed to perform equally well for backhand or forehand…
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Solace
Vibram Solace Flight Chart The Vibram Solace is a wind-fighting overstable driver with flight numbers of 11 | 4 | 0 | 4. Built in ultra-durable X-Link rubber blends, it delivers minimal high-speed turn, modest glide, and a forceful, predictable fade. Players reach for the Solace when they need placement-first distance, skip control, and confident lines in heavy wind. Beginner Overview: Reliable Fade, Shorter Carry Newer arms will see a quick push followed by an assertive finish left (RHBH). Use it for utility shots, headwinds, and forced hyzers rather than pure distance. The rubber grip helps consistency in bad weather. Flight Chart Insights for Intermediate Throwers Expect flat releases to…
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Freedom
Dynamic Discs Freedom Flight Chart The Dynamic Discs Freedom is a very fast distance driver with flight numbers of 14 | 5 | -3 | 3. It’s built for long S-curve distance—easy high-speed turn paired with reliable fade. In Lucid, Fuzion, and lighter Air/BioFuzion runs, the Freedom rewards clean form and height with effortless glide and max-D potential. Freedom Flight Path for Newer Arms Beginners will find the Freedom quite understable at speed: thrown flat it can drift right (RHBH) and finish back late. Use gentle hyzer releases, tailwinds, and wide fairways to keep it controllable. Flight Chart Notes for Intermediate Throwers Expect a hyzer-flip to long turn with forward…
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Backdraft
Salient Backdraft Flight Chart The Salient Backdraft is a high-speed distance driver with flight numbers around 12 | 5 | -1 | 2–3. In Cryo plastic it pairs strong glide with workable turn and a reliable fade, drawing frequent comparisons to a Destroyer-style flight. Its unique, domey profile and subtle thumb-track-like depression near the rim create an unusual feel that many throwers find secure once dialed in. Best for intermediate and advanced arms looking for long, predictable distance. Backdraft Flight Path for Beginners Newer players will see the Backdraft finish early and left (RHBH) unless they have above-average arm speed. Treat it as an overstable utility driver for headwinds, forced…
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Missilen
Latitude 64 Missilen Flight Chart The Latitude 64 Missilen posts flight numbers of 15 | 3 | -0.5 | 4.5. Built for speed and wind-fighting stability, it features the distinctive Opto “Hex” surface that reduces drag and promotes big ground play. This is a power driver for advanced arms—excellent for skip hyzers, headwinds, and force-over flex shots—while intermediates may use it as a utility disc. Beginners will generally see an early fade and short distances. Missilen Flight Path for Beginners At slower throw speeds, the Missilen will act very overstable. Expect a quick push forward followed by a strong, early fade. Newer players are better served treating it as a…
Distance Drivers
Distance drivers are designed for maximum distance — but only if you have the arm speed to match. More than any other disc type, distance driver flight paths depend on how fast you can throw. Most high-speed drivers require a launch speed of at least 50 mph to achieve their intended flight numbers and full glide potential.
If you throw slower than that, these discs will tend to fade early or fly more overstable than the numbers suggest. Use our interactive flight charts to compare how each driver behaves at different power levels, and find the one that truly fits your throwing speed.