Sometimes the most radical choice is the most boring one. While other putters promise dramatic curves and reliable fades, the Pure simply refuses to cooperate with physics as we know it. Point it where you want the disc to go, and that's exactly where it heads — no questions asked, no late-stage heroics.
This Swedish creation feels surprisingly substantial in the hand for a speed-3 disc, with a comfortable rim that doesn't fight your grip. The flight? Imagine drawing a line in the air with a laser pointer. That four glide keeps it aloft longer than you'd expect, while the zero turn and zero fade create something genuinely rare in disc golf: a disc that actually flies straight.
Most putters eventually succumb to gravity with some kind of finish. Not the Pure. Release it flat, watch it glide forever in a perfectly horizontal line until it simply decides to land. Hyzer it slightly, and it holds that gentle arc without fighting back to flat or diving hard left. The predictability becomes almost unsettling after throwing more temperamental discs.
Newer players discover they can actually hit their intended lines without compensating for flight characteristics they don't understand yet. Advanced players find themselves reaching for it when threading tight gaps or executing precise approach shots where any deviation spells trouble. It's become the putter that European touring pros consistently bag, and North American players are finally catching on.
Sure, it won't skip out of trouble or fight through headwinds like an overstable workhorse. But when you absolutely need the disc to go exactly where you're pointing? Nothing else comes close to this level of honest flight.
