Paul McBeth doesn't throw putters that fade like freight trains by accident. When the six-time world champion designed the Luna, he built something that laughs at crosswinds and refuses to turn over when you need it most. That aggressive finish? It's not a bug—it's the feature.
The Luna feels substantial in your grip, heavier than its numbers suggest, with a comfortable bead that locks into your fingers during putting strokes. Inside the circle, it flies surprisingly straight before that reliable dump kicks in, giving you a predictable chain-seeking trajectory that eliminates those heartbreaking roll-aways. Push it hard from 40 feet and watch it fight through gusts that would flip lesser putters into oblivion.
But here's where the Luna earns its keep beyond the putting green. Need to throw a putter off the tee through a tunnel? The Luna won't surprise you with unexpected turn. Forehand approaches into stiff headwinds? This thing cuts through air like it's got a personal vendetta against wind resistance. The substantial fade means your upshots actually stick where they land instead of skipping twenty feet past the pin.
Tour pros gravitate toward the Luna because consistency trumps flashy flights when money's on the line. It's not the glidiest putter you'll throw, and that three-fade can feel aggressive compared to neutral options, but reliability has its own reward. Think of it as the putter equivalent of a trustworthy friend—maybe not the most exciting, but always there when conditions get sketchy. Your putting confidence will thank you, especially when autumn winds start howling through the trees.
