The Axiom Defy is a 11-speed slightly overstable distance driver. With published flight numbers of 11 / 5 / -1 / 3, it is most often described as suited for long, controlled power drives that resist turning over, forehand drives that need a dependable fade.
Overview
The Axiom Defy is a stable-to-overstable distance driver with flight numbers of 11/5/-1/3.[1][2] It flies a straight initial line with strong resistance to turnover even at high power, finishing with a controlled, dependable fade.[3] Built on Axiom's two-piece overmold construction, the Defy concentrates weight in the outer rim for added gyroscopic stability, helping it fight torque better than many single-piece drivers.[3] Reviewers commonly describe it as a more overstable counterpart to the MVP Photon or a longer Axiom Crave.[4] It is PDGA-approved with a maximum weight of 175.1g.[2]
Flight characteristics
Flight numbers describe the published behavior of the disc when thrown at its design speed. Real-world flight varies with plastic, weight, age, and thrower power. The community-averaged numbers above reflect crowd-sourced observations from real throws — typically slightly more understable than the manufacturer's published values, which is the most consistent pattern across nearly every commercial mold.
Recommended uses
Reach for the Defy when you need a long drive that holds its line and finishes reliably left (for right-hand backhand). It excels on headwind tee shots, forehand drives demanding a strong fade, and controlled power lines where turnover is unwelcome.[3][4] Its resistance to flipping makes it best suited to intermediate and advanced players with the arm speed to bring out its full flight.[3]
Best for:
- Long, controlled power drives that resist turning over
- Forehand drives that need a dependable fade
- Headwind tee shots that hold their line
- Stable-to-overstable distance for higher-power players
Community notes — how players actually use this disc
Plastics & variants
The Defy is available in the following plastic blends from Axiom:[1]
Neutron, Proton, Fission, Eclipse, Plasma
Plastic blend significantly affects flight character. Premium plastics like Champion, Z, or C-Line generally fly more overstable when fresh and hold their stability over time. Base plastics like DX, Pro, or Active beat in faster and become more understable workhorses with use.
History
The Defy was PDGA-approved on April 21, 2016 as part of Axiom+Discs">Axiom Discs, the MVP+Disc+Sports">MVP Disc Sports sister brand known for its GYRO two-piece overmold technology.[2] The disc gained renewed popularity after Simon Lizotte joined Team MVP and adopted the Defy as a distance driver of choice for both forehand and backhand drives.[3] It is offered across Axiom's plastic lineup, including the premium Neutron and Proton blends and the dual-material Fission and glow Eclipse options.[1] Within Axiom's range it sits as a more overstable, control-oriented alternative to glidier distance drivers like the Photon.[4]
Notable throwers
Simon Lizotte
Similar discs
- MVP Photon · 11/5/-1/2.5
- Discraft Force · 12/5/0/3
- Axiom Crave · 6/5/-1/1
References & further reading
- How to read disc golf flight numbers — Discpedia primer
- PDGA Approved Disc List — search for "Defy" to find the Axiom Defy entry (PDGA-approved 2016)
- Axiom official site — manufacturer product page
Sources
Content on this page has been cross-checked against the following sources. Numbered citations in the prose above link to the matching entry here.
- Defy — Axiom Discs official product page (flight 11/5/-1/3, GYRO overmold, plastics)
- Defy from Axiom Discs — PDGA Equipment Certification (approved 2016-04-21, cert 16-36, canonical dimensions)
- Axiom Defy — Infinite Discs product page (stable-overstable flight, Simon Lizotte, overmold design)
- Axiom Defy — Overstable Distance Driver (Skyline Disc Golf; comparison to Photon and Crave)
This is a community page. Spotted something wrong or out of date? Suggest a correction — every edit is reviewed before it goes live.