Power throwers know the feeling — that moment when your arm speed finally matches a disc's demands, and suddenly the fairway opens up in ways you never imagined. The Nuke lives for that moment, demanding respect while delivering distances that make other drivers look pedestrian.
This isn't your typical max-distance bomber. Where most speed-13 discs crumble under pressure or flip into roller territory, the Nuke maintains its composure with unwavering overstability. The rim feels substantial without being unwieldy, though let's be honest — newer players will find this thing about as cooperative as a headwind on hole eighteen.
Watch a seasoned arm unleash the Nuke properly. Pure laser-beam flight. It cuts through air with minimal turn despite that glidey-5 rating, tracking forward with mechanical precision before that fade-3 brings it home with authority. No surprises, no late-breaking drama — just predictable, penetrating distance that eats up real estate.
The beauty lies in its reliability when conditions turn nasty. Crosswinds that send other distance drivers sideways barely register here. Need to park one 450 feet out in a stiff breeze? The Nuke shrugs and delivers. It's become the go-to bomber for players who've graduated beyond hoping their disc might fly far to demanding it will.
Sure, it's not for everyone — probably not for most people, actually. But for those with the arm speed to unlock its potential, the Nuke represents that rare combination of maximum distance and maximum control. When you absolutely, positively need to outdrive everyone else overnight, this is your weapon. No hyzerflips required.
