Disc Battle of the Day: Discraft Ringer vs Axiom Pixel
Today we’re pitting a torque-resistant approach workhorse against a straighter, gentler putter. The Discraft Ringer (4 | 4 | 0 | 2) and the Axiom Pixel (2 | 4 | 0 | 0.5) live in the putt-and-approach lane, but they solve very different on-course problems. Here’s how to choose the right tool for your bag and your throwing style.
Quick Flight Numbers

Ringer
Pros
- Speed 4 with Turn 0 and Fade 2 delivers a stable, point-and-hyzer finish that shrugs off torque on approaches.
- Glide 4 carries flat lines without floating long, great for 80–200 ft touch shots that must land near the pin.
- Low turn and dependable fade inspire confidence into headwinds and on forehand standstills.
- Excellent for controlled skips and ground play when you need a finish you can plan for.
Cons
- The Fade 2 finish can pull you left (RHBH) if you baby the release or aim too tight in woods.
- Not the straightest circle putter; it prefers approach duty over dead-straight putts.
- Can come up short on floaty bids—less “glidey drift,” more “drive and drop.”
Pixel
Pros
- Speed 2 / Turn 0 / Fade 0.5 makes it a true point-and-shoot putter with a soft, gentle finish.
- Glide 4 keeps putts and touch throws aloft without surprising dump at the end.
- Easy shaping on slight hyzer or baby anhyzer—perfect for narrow lanes and floaty layups.
- Beginner-friendly straightness that rewards clean form at low power.
Cons
- Minimal fade means less wind resistance; can drift on gusty days or with off-axis torque.
- Not ideal for power forehands or aggressive approaches where a firm finish is required.
- Requires committed aim on longer bids since it won’t bail you out with a hard fade.
Head-to-Head
- Wind: Choose the Ringer when it’s breezy; its Turn 0 and Fade 2 hold line and finish. The Pixel is best in calm-to-moderate air.
- Approach style: For hyzer or forehand approaches that must finish, throw the Ringer. For straight floaters and soft landings, throw the Pixel.
- Putting circle: If you like a straight spin or push putt with minimal fade, the Pixel shines. If you prefer a firmer, slight-hyzer release that finishes, the Ringer fits.
- Shot shaping: Ringer = controlled, reliable fade and workable skips. Pixel = neutral lines, gentle turnovers that pan and sit.
- Player profile: Power throwers and forehand users lean Ringer; newer players and touch-focused putters lean Pixel.
Verdict
If you need a dependable approach disc that resists turn, handles wind, and finishes on command, the Discraft Ringer is the safer all-conditions pick. It excels from 80–200 ft, on forehands, and whenever your card says “park it.” If you want a straight, confidence-building putter that glides on a line and only nudges at the end, the Axiom Pixel is your precision tool—ideal for clean, neutral flights, floaty bids, and beginner-friendly control. Many bags can justify both: Ringer for utility and wind, Pixel for scoring touch.