Some distance drivers promise the world but crumble under pressure. The Grym delivers something rarer: reliability at maximum effort.
This Swedish bomber cuts through headwinds like they're gentle breezes, maintaining its intended line when lesser discs start dancing sideways. That substantial fade at flight's end isn't a design flaw—it's the whole point. While other 11-speeds might flip and burn on your biggest throws, the Grym stays composed, tracking forward with authority before that trustworthy leftward sweep brings it home.
The feel is substantial without being chunky. Kastaplast's premium plastics grip beautifully, and the rim sits naturally for both backhand bombs and confident forehands. This isn't a disc that demands perfect form to perform—though it rewards clean release with extra distance.
What sets the Grym apart is its predictability across arm speeds. Newer players can lean into it without fear of an early turn, while power throwers get reliable penetration on shots where accuracy matters more than maximum distance. Think tight fairways where a Destroyer might be too much disc, but you still need serious carry.
The flight path is pure business: smooth acceleration, minimal high-speed turn, then that dependable fade that parks it where you're aiming rather than where the wind wants it. It's become the go-to bomber for players who've grown tired of distance drivers that work perfectly in field practice but disappear when tournament pressure mounts.
Sure, you might squeeze extra feet from flippy speed-12s on perfect days. But when conditions get messy—and they always do—the Grym keeps throwing strikes.
