Sometimes the most radical thing a disc can do is absolutely nothing. While other midranges fight you with their built-in tendencies, the Mako3 just goes where you tell it to go—no questions asked, no course corrections applied.
That zero fade isn't marketing speak. It's a promise this disc keeps religiously. Throw it flat and it dies flat. Hyzer release? It holds that angle all the way to the ground. Need an anhyzer line through the trees? The Mako3 won't bail you out by fading back—it commits fully to whatever line you give it.
In the hand, it's surprisingly comfortable for such a straight-flying disc, with a slightly shallow feel that newer players appreciate and pros rely on for surgical precision. The rim feels honest, if that makes sense. No surprises, no quirks.
Where this disc shines is on those shots where other midranges would overcomplicate things. Dead straight tunnel shots become routine. Gentle turnovers stay turned. That awkward 250-foot approach where you need exactly zero movement left or right? The Mako3 handles it like a seasoned veteran.
Sure, it won't fight a headwind like your trusty Buzzz, and it definitely won't skip aggressively on hard ground. But for touch shots, for learning proper form, for those moments when you need a disc to simply fly straight without any attitude—this is your tool.
Advanced players bag it for finesse work and dead-straight lines. Beginners love it because it actually flies like the flight numbers suggest. The Mako3 doesn't lie to you, which might be the rarest quality in disc golf.
