I've avoided Prodigy honestly due to laziness. It annoyed me that I had to Google flight numbers and didn't have them handed to me. I'm glad I took the extra time to learn and shift my perspective, great manufacturer!
Excellent video Alex, easy to comprehend, a lot more prodigy throwers in my area, this is exactly what I needs to better understand how thier discs line up to mine.
Fantastic video! I’m helping a buddy with his pop up stand and didn’t know much about the Prodigy Lineup. I feel much better equipped to handle questions now!
I have a very unique "power" grip where my fingers don't actually curl into the rim of the disc. I keep my fingertips tightly pressed to the rim wall. Very clean and fast release. Reliable angle control. Anyhow. Prodigy and Kastaplast are the only mfrs that make smooth edged discs. After burning through a few innova/discraft options, I'm getting hematomas under the surface of my fingertips. I'll take your advice on the D2 (or maybe an x2) as a way to help reduce injury from my backhand grip.
@@jymmiwynn2202 I think they are referencing the fact the Discmania discs have been harder to come by and I know a handful of people who have gone to other manufacturers just because of disc availability.
@@coreymeisenheimer1724 It's an interesting topic for sure. Every time Discmania does a limited release they get hundreds of negative reviews by people who missed out. Discmania's inability to meet demand means they are missing out on potential sales, but the demand appears to be increasing anyway. Something tells me most of the people who claim they are "never buying Discmania again" come back for the next release.
I heard it's a roundedness underneath the disc for a smooth release. Don't quote me on that though, because some new A2's will legit cut you right out of the box 😄
@@joshuawaddell6640I mainly throw Prodigy's discs and seems like they have gotten rid of the flashing problem now. I haven't noticed flashing in newer discs and I've heard the same from other people too.
Really helpful, I don't throw prodigy but was so confused on how their discs compared to other manufactures.
I've avoided Prodigy honestly due to laziness. It annoyed me that I had to Google flight numbers and didn't have them handed to me. I'm glad I took the extra time to learn and shift my perspective, great manufacturer!
big fan of how prodigy has formatted the plastics and discs. super easy to understand once explained.
Excellent video Alex, easy to comprehend, a lot more prodigy throwers in my area, this is exactly what I needs to better understand how thier discs line up to mine.
Fantastic video! I’m helping a buddy with his pop up stand and didn’t know much about the Prodigy Lineup. I feel much better equipped to handle questions now!
i Finally understand prodigy !! thank you!! seriously a great video!
I have a very unique "power" grip where my fingers don't actually curl into the rim of the disc. I keep my fingertips tightly pressed to the rim wall. Very clean and fast release. Reliable angle control.
Anyhow. Prodigy and Kastaplast are the only mfrs that make smooth edged discs. After burning through a few innova/discraft options, I'm getting hematomas under the surface of my fingertips.
I'll take your advice on the D2 (or maybe an x2) as a way to help reduce injury from my backhand grip.
I have a mixer between Innova and Discraft and I am honestly looking for a more tougher and grippy plastic. I don't like gummy type plastic
I wanted to like my zone but the dish was way to deep I swapped over to the a3 and it was exactly what I needed for my baby hands
Little did you know, 1 year later this video would explode during the mass exodus from Discmania to other manufacturers.
When did that happen? Discmania has a huge following.
@@jymmiwynn2202 I think they are referencing the fact the Discmania discs have been harder to come by and I know a handful of people who have gone to other manufacturers just because of disc availability.
@@coreymeisenheimer1724 It's an interesting topic for sure. Every time Discmania does a limited release they get hundreds of negative reviews by people who missed out. Discmania's inability to meet demand means they are missing out on potential sales, but the demand appears to be increasing anyway. Something tells me most of the people who claim they are "never buying Discmania again" come back for the next release.
What is prodigy's "easy to release technology"???
I heard it's a roundedness underneath the disc for a smooth release. Don't quote me on that though, because some new A2's will legit cut you right out of the box 😄
@@joshuawaddell6640I mainly throw Prodigy's discs and seems like they have gotten rid of the flashing problem now. I haven't noticed flashing in newer discs and I've heard the same from other people too.
Fun fact: no where's selling prodigy's and its sad
Unless you visited the town of Gresham in Oregon I havent seen any in a disc golf shop
My local Play It Again Sports (SW Florida) stocked their supply with a ton of prodigy some 2 months ago or so.