Rolling downhill through autumn leaves, watching plastic carve impossible lines through the forest — that's where the Sol lives. This midrange defies everything you think you know about disc flight, turning so dramatically that right-handed backhand throws curve left like a boomerang with commitment issues.
The Sol feels deceptively normal in the hand. Standard midrange profile, comfortable rim. Nothing hints at the chaos about to unfold. Launch it flat with moderate power and watch physics bend — the disc immediately banks right, holds that turn for an eternity, then just... keeps going. No fade. Zero. It's like the disc forgot it's supposed to come back.
Most players discover the Sol accidentally, maybe trying to throw a gentle turnover that becomes a complete orbit around nearby trees. But once you understand its nature, this becomes surgical precision for the most impossible shots. Need to get around a massive dogleg left? The Sol laughs at geometry. Tight tunnel requiring a perfect S-curve? Child's play.
Where this disc truly shines is roller duty. Flip it over onto its edge and the Sol becomes a ground ball that tracks straighter than your average fairway driver roll. The lack of fade means it won't hook hard left at the end — just pure, predictable distance across fairways.
Advanced players love the Sol for creative shot-shaping. Beginners often find it frustratingly unpredictable until they embrace its chaos. It's not a disc for every throw, but for those specific situations where conventional flight paths fail, the Sol delivers impossible angles that somehow work. Pure magic wrapped in understable plastic.
