The wind howls across the fairway, and most drivers cower. Not this beast. When conditions turn hostile and your usual bombers start acting like scared children, the PD2 steps up with the confidence of a seasoned bouncer handling rowdy patrons.
This isn't your typical distance driver—it's a utility knife disguised as a bomber. Sure, that speed-13 rating suggests maximum distance potential, but the PD2's real magic lies in its unwavering reliability when everything else in your bag goes sideways. Literally. The combination of minimal glide and that punishing fade creates a flight pattern that laughs at crosswinds and headwinds alike.
In calmer conditions, most players will need serious arm speed to unlock its potential. Throw it flat with authority, and it charges forward before that inevitable hard fade brings it crashing back to earth. But here's where it gets interesting—seasoned arms can manipulate that overstable nature for controlled anhyzer shots that always come back, or flex shots that carve beautiful S-curves through wooded corridors.
The hand feel? Substantial. Meaty. This disc demands respect from the moment you grip it. The rim fills your fingers with purpose, telegraphing exactly what kind of flight you're about to unleash.
Think of it as insurance for your distance slot. When accuracy matters more than pure distance, when trees line both sides of the fairway, when that crucial tournament round can't afford a roller that keeps rolling into the parking lot—that's PD2 territory. It's not the disc you reach for every hole, but when you need it, nothing else will do. Dependability never felt so aggressive.
