MVP Particle Flight Chart
The MVP Particle is an overstable putt-and-approach disc with flight numbers around 3 | 3 | 0 | 2.5. It’s built for torque resistance, wind-fighting stability, and short-range control, behaving like a more overstable cousin to the Envy. Most players use the Particle primarily as a throwing putter and approach disc, where its low glide and strong fade create a precise, repeatable flight path that stays on line and finishes hard.
Flight Path by Skill Level
Particle Flight Path for Newer Disc Golfers
For beginners, the MVP Particle will feel quite overstable. Thrown flat at low power, it flies straight for a short distance and then fades early and strongly to the left on right-hand backhand throws. That makes it less ideal as a first putting putter, but very useful as a “trust it to fade” approach disc inside about 150 feet. Newer players can lean on the Particle when they want to avoid long sail-by misses and prefer a consistent crash toward the basket rather than extra glide.
Flight Chart Insights for Intermediate Players
Intermediate players will see the Particle’s flight chart line up nicely with its posted flight numbers. On a flat release with moderate power, it tracks straight with minimal or no high-speed turn, then finishes with a solid, late fade. The low glide keeps the disc from drifting long, which is perfect for controlled approaches and short tee shots on technical holes. Reviewers often highlight how confidently they can throw it into a headwind or on torque-heavy releases without worrying about the disc flipping over.
Flight Numbers in the Hands of Advanced Players
Advanced throwers can push the Particle surprisingly far for a 3-speed. With clean form and higher power, it will fly on a straight line before dumping hard at the end, matching its stable-overstable flight numbers. Power players like it for laser-straight approaches that must finish on hyzer, as well as for touch flex lines that need to pan out and still fade. It’s a strong candidate as a driving putter in windy conditions or on wooded lines where a midrange might carry too far.
Forehand Flight Path & Utility Lines
The Particle’s flat top, shallow feel, and overstable profile make it very comfortable for forehand approaches. Sidearm throwers report that it handles torque well, resists turn, and still provides a predictable fade, even on shorter touch shots. It excels at low, skipping hyzers, spike approaches, and scramble shots from awkward stances. If you lean on forehand upshots, the Particle gives you a tight, repeatable flight path you can trust.
Interactive MVP Particle Flight Chart
Use the interactive flight chart below to see how the MVP Particle flight path changes with different arm speeds, release angles, and throwing styles. Adjust the sliders to match your power, whether you throw mainly backhand, forehand, right-hand, or left-hand, and see how its overstable flight numbers translate to your own game.
MVP Particle
Interactive flight chart brought you by DG Puttheads. Compare every disc over at flightcharts.dgputtheads.com
Try the MVP Particle
If you’re looking for a low-glide, overstable throwing putter that shrugs off torque and wind, the Particle is built for confident approaches and short tee shots where landing control matters more than raw distance.
Puttheads Notes
- Posted flight numbers: roughly 3 speed, 3 glide, 0 turn, 2.5 fade – a firmly overstable putt-and-approach profile.
- Primary role: throwing putter and approach disc, more than a pure circle-only putter.
- Best uses: headwind approaches, short tee shots, and torque-heavy releases where you still want a strong, reliable fade.
- Feel: shallow 10 mm putt-and-approach class rim with a clean, flat top that suits both backhand and forehand grips.
- Who will like it: players who enjoy the Envy but want something more overstable, or anyone needing a “point-and-fade” approach disc.
- Reviewer themes: praised for predictability, wind resistance, and ability to handle power without turning; often tagged as a go-to overstable throwing putter.