Latitude 64 Wild earns PDGA approval for sanctioned play
Latitude 64’s Wild cleared PDGA approval with certification 26-85 and a 175.1-gram max weight. The new mold joins a busy run of Latitude 64 approvals.

Latitude 64’s Wild cleared PDGA approval on June 29, giving the company another sanctioned disc as summer tournament season rolls on. The PDGA posted the approval announcement on Sunday, June 28, at 21:46, and the certification page lists the Wild as approved the next day with certification number 26-85.
The numbers point to a fast, high-speed driver profile. The Wild’s listed specs include a 21.1-centimeter diameter, 1.8-centimeter height, 1.1-centimeter rim depth, 2.4-centimeter rim thickness, 16.3-centimeter inside rim diameter, 5.2 percent rim depth-to-diameter ratio, 26.00 rim configuration and 10.68-kilogram flexibility, with a max weight of 175.1 grams. That is the kind of profile players usually associate with the top end of the bag, the slot used for full-power distance work, wind-resistant lines and committed flex shots rather than finesse approaches.
That makes the Wild most interesting to players already rotating faster Latitude 64 drivers in and out of their tournament setups. In practical terms, it is the sort of mold that can compete for a spot with the discs a player leans on when a stable or overstable driver is needed to finish hard, hold a line in the wind or give extra bite at the end of the flight. For retailers, it is another name to place on the shelf in the category that usually gets the most attention from serious buyers.

The approval also fits a clear pattern for Latitude 64. Amber was approved on March 2, 2026, while Fire and Mighty were both posted on December 1, 2025. The brand also picked up PDGA approvals for Strive on December 11, 2023, and Honor on December 12, 2022. That run shows Latitude 64 keeping a steady stream of new molds in the approved pool, which matters because sanctioned play depends on the PDGA’s technical process just as much as it does on the manufacturer’s release calendar.
The PDGA Technical Standards Working Group is responsible for testing equipment submitted for approval, and the association says that testing is done either by an independent laboratory or by a working-group member with the needed expertise and equipment. Latitude 64’s current site describes the brand as making discs for everyone from experienced professionals to players who just discovered the sport, and its release calendar says online drops go live at 15:00 CEST unless otherwise stated. The Wild now joins that pipeline as a legal option for sanctioned competition, with players and retailers able to slot it into their planning immediately.
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