Discraft turns UltraLuna experiment into stock putter release
Discraft is putting the UltraLuna into Soft and Hard stock runs. The move tests whether UltraStar-ring feel can win over Luna throwers and touch-putter loyalists.

Discraft is moving the UltraLuna from a limited Battle Pack experiment into a stock putter, with retailers able to order it starting June 19 and an online release set for July 10. The new run comes in Discraft Soft and Hard blends, turning a one-off concept into a disc the company expects players to carry, test and buy like any other everyday mold.
The pitch is built around feel. The UltraLuna’s defining feature is the flight-ring texture across the plate, a nod to the UltraStar that Discraft says gives players a more connected grip and a cleaner reference point in the hand. The hard blend is aimed at players who want a firmer, more structured release, while the soft blend is designed to add flex and grip for touch shots, approaches and putting. That makes the stock UltraLuna less of a novelty and more of a fit for players who already trust the Luna but want a different tactile answer in the hand.

That matters because the Luna already carries real weight in Discraft’s lineup. The company says the Luna was co-designed from start to finish with Paul McBeth, and Discraft identifies McBeth as a 6x World Champion. The UltraLuna first appeared in the Luna Battle Pack as a side-by-side test of the classic Luna and the UltraStar-ring version, and Discraft called the Battle Pack Redemption Program a first for the company. The redemption cards were randomly inserted into select boxes and could be traded for one of three limited collector sets: Full-Foil Sparkle, with 100 packs; SuperColor, with 50; and CryZtal Ghost, with 50.
The PDGA gave the mold a formal green light on October 27, 2025, listing the UltraLuna, model PM-1025-P, under certification number 25-164. The approval lists a max weight of 176.0 grams, a diameter of 21.2 centimeters and a flexibility rating of 7.50 kilograms. Discraft had already stoked collector interest with UltraLuna misprints from the Battle Pack, including an Anthony Barela head overstamp, before deciding the disc belonged in regular production.
The stock release also fits a broader pattern for Discraft’s Paul McBeth ecosystem, which already includes the Luna, Big Z Luna and other signature molds. Bringing the UltraLuna into standard Soft and Hard blends signals that Discraft sees enough demand for a ring-textured, McBeth-linked putter to make it part of the core retail plan, not just a special run for collectors.
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