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Mint Discs teases new Pizza and Rodeo runs, shares flight notes

Mint’s latest note points to new Pizza and Rodeo runs, with a Sublime Pizza flying straight and late-fading, and a Royal Glow Rodeo staying overstable.

Tanya Okafor··2 min read
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Mint Discs teases new Pizza and Rodeo runs, shares flight notes
Source: armorydiscgolf.com

Mint Discs used a brief June 14 note to do more than tease inventory. It gave throwers a clean read on two molds that are already moving through the brand’s pipeline: the Pizza and the Rodeo. The update also came from the company’s Austin orbit, with the writer saying they played Live Oak on Thursday and Sprinkle Valley on Sunday, a small detail that ties the release talk directly to the courses and rounds shaping Mint’s daily rhythm.

The Pizza is the sharper headline. Mint said new runs were coming soon, and the writer went further, calling the Pizza their favorite fairway in the Mint lineup right now. That matters because the mold only reached PDGA approval on March 2, 2026, and Mint has already positioned it as an 8-speed fairway driver with approximate flight numbers of 8/5/-1/2. The first-run Eternal and Recycled editions were tied to the Heart of Texas Tour, so every fresh run adds another layer to a disc that has already been used as both a performance piece and a fundraising piece.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The most useful field note in the post came from the Sublime Pizza. Mint’s writer said it flew very close to the Glow Pizza, with a straight flight and predictable late fade. That profile suggests a fairway that can cover centerline shots without getting too touchy, then still finish with enough bite to hold its lane. For players looking for a driver that sits between workable turn and dependable finish, that is the kind of early read that can shape a bag decision before stock hits shelves.

The Rodeo came with a different kind of clue. Mint said new runs were on the way there too, and the writer described the Royal Glow version as having a flat top and a firm Royal blend. The mold was approved by the PDGA on March 9, 2026, and Mint lists it as a beadless midrange with approximate flight numbers of 5/5/-1/3. Mint also said in March that the Rodeo was its first mid manufactured by Prodigy Disc and that it improves as it beats in, which lines up with the writer’s suggestion that baseline plastic may be the better long-term play.

Even with the Royal Glow version still described as overstable, the role is clear: approaches and forehands. That makes the Rodeo a utility mid for players who want shapeable touch now and more workable flight later, while the Pizza looks like the fairway slot most likely to draw the widest early attention when these new runs land.

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