Champion and Star are Innova's two flagship premium plastics. They share the same molds and the same flight numbers, but they fly noticeably different. Champion is harder, slicker, and holds overstability longer. Star is softer, grippier, and beats in faster. Picking between them depends on your shot needs and how long you want a disc to stay the same.

The quick answer

  • Pick Champion if: you want a disc to fly the same in year 5 as in year 1, you throw forehands often, you play in headwinds, or you need maximum overstability from a mold.
  • Pick Star if: you want better grip, you play in cold weather, you want a disc that seasons into a more usable stable line over time, or you simply prefer how grippy plastic feels in hand.

Champion: the harder option

Champion is Innova's hardest premium plastic. It's translucent, very firm, and noticeably slicker than Star. Released originally as Innova's most durable formulation, it remains the go-to plastic for players who want a disc to retain its flight character for the long haul.

Characteristics:

  • Most overstable feel when fresh of any standard Innova plastic.
  • Holds turn-resistance for hundreds of rounds.
  • Gets glassy in cold weather (~50°F and below).
  • Chips and stress-marks become visible but the disc remains functionally indestructible.
  • Slightly slicker grip than Star.

Star: the grippier option

Star is a slightly softer premium plastic that trades some durability for grip. It's the most popular Innova premium plastic for a reason — most players prefer how it feels in hand and how it ages.

Characteristics:

  • Tackier, more positive grip than Champion.
  • Slightly flexible — bends a bit under hand pressure.
  • Holds up well in cold weather where Champion struggles.
  • Beats in over months or years rather than years or decades.
  • Slightly less overstable than Champion when fresh, but only a touch.

Practical comparison: same mold, both plastics

Most players who throw a particular Innova mold bag both plastics for different roles. Two examples:

The Destroyer: A Champion Destroyer is a forehand and headwind tool. A Star Destroyer is the all-purpose backhand driver. After ~200 rounds, the Star Destroyer becomes a workable, slightly understable line-shaper while the Champion Destroyer is still rock-overstable.

The Teebird: Champion Teebirds are wind-resistant utility fairway drivers. Star Teebirds beat in to become the legendary "buttery" stable workhorses that pros bag for tight wooded lines.

Cold weather: Star wins

Below ~50°F, Champion plastic becomes noticeably slicker. The grip texture you normally rely on disappears, and the disc can slip on release. Star handles cold much better — it maintains tackiness at temperatures where Champion is sliding around. GStar (Star with a cold-weather additive) is even better at temperatures below 40°F.

Hot weather: Champion wins

The opposite is also true. In summer heat where hands sweat, Star can get over-tacky and stick to skin awkwardly on release. Champion's slicker feel becomes an advantage — the disc releases cleanly even from sweaty hands.

Which lasts longer?

Both are very durable. Practical lifespan in normal play:

  • Champion: 500+ rounds before noticeable flight change.
  • Star: 100–300 rounds before noticeable flight change, then a long gradual transition.

Note "longer" doesn't always mean "better" — for many players, the gradually-shifting Star is more useful than the unchanging Champion. A bag of Champion plastic stays static; a bag of Star plastic evolves with you.

What to actually pick

If you're buying your first premium Innova disc, get Star. It's the more forgiving choice, handles a wider range of conditions, and feels comfortable in hand.

If you're adding a second copy of a mold you already throw and you want it to stay overstable forever, get Champion.

If you play primarily in cold weather, prefer GStar over either.

If a specific Tour Series stamp is only available in one plastic, that's also a totally valid reason to pick that one — collectability matters to many players.

Browse Innova discs in the disc index to see which molds come in both Champion and Star.