When the fairway disappears into a wall of headwind, most drivers start flipping like pancakes. Not this beast. The Force cuts through gusts that would turn lesser discs into boomerangs, maintaining its line with the stubbornness of a mule and twice the reliability.
This isn't your typical bomber meant for calm mornings at the local course. Paul McBeth has trusted the Force through countless professional rounds, and there's a reason why — it delivers predictable overstability when conditions turn nasty or when you need to muscle a shot around trouble. The rim feels substantial without being unwieldy, though newer players might find it demanding more than their weekend warrior arm can handle.
What sets the Force apart is how it channels power into forward momentum rather than wild turns. Launch it flat and watch it track straight before that inevitable fade kicks in — no surprises, no flip-ups that leave you scrambling in the woods. It's the disc that transforms a sketchy 400-foot tunnel shot into something manageable, carving through tight gaps where other high-speed drivers would find trees.
Sure, you need serious arm speed to unlock its full potential. Throw it too soft and you'll get a reliable hyzer with modest distance. But when you've got the snap to really rip it? The Force becomes your go-to workhorse for those moments when accuracy matters more than maximum distance. It sits perfectly between the slightly less stable Undertaker and the meat hook that is the Machete, giving you that sweet spot of power and control. Sometimes predictable is exactly what your round needs.
