Aftershock

DGA Aftershock – Flight Chart

Overview

The DGA Aftershock is a stable-to-overstable midrange built for control and reliable finishes. With flight numbers 5 | 4 | 0 | 2, it slots between the Squall and Quake—straighter than a true meathook but more torque-resistant than neutral mids—making it a dependable choice for backhand or forehand lines in woods or wind.

Beginner Guidance: Straight Control with a Clean Finish

Newer players will find the Aftershock tracks mostly straight before a predictable fade. It’s a confidence piece for approach shots where you want the disc to hold the line and then sit near the target.

Flight Chart Notes for Intermediate Arms

At league power, expect neutral high-speed stability (0 turn) with a smooth, late flight path fade. Touch hyzers, flat lasers up to ~250–300 ft, and gentle forehand placements are its bread and butter.

Flight Numbers in Practice for Advanced Throwers

Power throwers can lean on the Aftershock for torque-resistant flat drives, forced-over flexes that fight back, and headwind midrange shots when straighter molds might drift. It shapes lines without dumping out early.

Forehand Utility and Placement Shots

The rim and stability play well for short-to-medium flicks. Expect a clean release, minimal turn, and a controlled, skip-checked fade—perfect for threading gaps and landing pin-high.

Try our interactive Flight Chart to see how the Aftershock’s flight path responds to your arm speed, release angle, and throwing style (BH/FH).

DGA Aftershock

 

Interactive flight chart brought you by DG Puttheads. Compare every disc over at flightcharts.dgputtheads.com

Try the DGA Aftershock

If you need a mid that stays honest under power and still finishes reliably, the Aftershock delivers consistent placement and confident line control.

Puttheads Notes

  • Flight Numbers: 5 | 4 | 0 | 2
  • Stability: Stable-to-overstable; straight mid flight with a controlled finish
  • Plastics Seen: ProLine, SP Line, periodic Tour/Special runs (SP tends to be a tick more stable)
  • Best Uses: Woods control, headwind mids, straight-to-fade approaches, forehand placement shots
  • Player Fit: Intermediates wanting reliability; advanced players for torque-resistant mid duties
  • Nearby Slots: Straighter than Quake; more wind/torque ready than Squall
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