Disc Battle of the Day: Innova King Cobra vs Innova Mako3
Two Innova midranges, two very different intentions. The King Cobra brings controllable stability and a predictable finish, while the Mako3 is the definition of point-and-shoot straight. If you’re choosing a workhorse mid vs a laser-straight line holder, this comparison has your answer.
Quick Flight Numbers


King Cobra
A stable mid with touchable speed, the King Cobra thrives on control, shaping lines with a gentle but trustworthy finish.
- Pros
- Speed 4 and Glide 5 make it easy to range touch shots without sailing long.
- 0 turn and 2 fade offer a reliable finish for controlled hyzers and straight-to-fade lines.
- Handles moderate wind and torque better than neutral mids, great for confident releases.
- Forehand-friendly stability helps prevent flutter from turning into unwanted drift.
- Cons
- Less raw distance than faster, straighter mids; it trades length for control.
- Fade can show up early on low-power throws, shortening tunnels if thrown too soft.
- Not ideal when you need a perfectly straight finish or long, drifting turnovers.
Mako3
The archetype of straight, the Mako3 rewards clean form with dead-center flights and minimal lateral movement.
- Pros
- 5 | 5 | 0 | 0 delivers true point-and-shoot lines with virtually no finish.
- Holds the angle you set—excellent for hyzer flips and buttery anhyzers that pan forever.
- Great teaching tool for newer players; reveals and rewards clean release angles.
- Extra speed vs speed-4 mids adds carry for longer straight tunnels and flat fairways.
- Cons
- Neutral finish means less help fighting wind or fading back from slight overturns.
- More sensitive to nose/torque; bad form can make it drift or sail past landing zones.
- Offers less “insurance” on placement shots where a gentle fade is desirable.
Head-to-Head
- Tight, dead-straight tunnels: choose the Mako3 for minimal fade and maximum line-holding.
- Controlled hyzers and straight-to-fade approaches: pick the King Cobra for its dependable 2 fade.
- Wind or forehand utility: King Cobra resists turn and handles torque better.
- Hyzer-flip lasers: Mako3 pops to flat and rides straight without dumping at the finish.
- Low-ceiling shots where skip or fade helps placement: King Cobra’s finish is an asset.
- Beginner-friendly pick: Mako3 teaches clean lines; the King Cobra complements once control improves.
Verdict
If your goal is pure line-holding with effortless distance control, the Mako3 should be your primary straight mid. It excels in woods, tunnels, and calm conditions. If you value a touch more stability for placement, light wind, or forehand mids, the King Cobra is the smarter play. Together, they form a complete midrange duo: Mako3 for laser-straight shots, King Cobra for reliable fade and control.