Some putters demand respect through authority. Others earn it through subtlety. The Nova whispers rather than shouts, floating through the air with an almost supernatural straightness that catches newcomers off guard.
This isn't your typical beaded putter demanding commitment on every throw. The Nova's overmolded rim creates something unique — a disc that feels substantial yet forgiving, with grip texture that won't slip even when your palms are sweating through that crucial tournament round. That overmolded construction does more than just feel different; it fundamentally changes how the disc flies.
Watch a Nova in flight and you'll see something almost unsettling: a putter that holds whatever line you give it with minimal fade. Put it on hyzer? It holds hyzer. Throw it flat? Dead straight tracking that seems to defy physics. The gentle turn kicks in just enough to counteract any natural fade, creating flight paths that look drawn with a ruler.
Here's where it gets interesting — roller putts become ridiculously easy. That understable nature means you can throw confident anhyzer approaches knowing the Nova won't hook back aggressively. Tight wooded lines open up when you're carrying a disc that won't fight your release angle.
Advanced players appreciate the Nova for approach shots requiring surgical precision. Beginners love it because it won't mask form flaws with aggressive stability. Sure, headwinds will push it around more than a Zone, but in calm conditions or tailwinds, few discs offer this level of controllable neutrality.
The Nova rewards finesse over force, patience over power. Sometimes the most radical design is the one that simply flies straight.
