Disc Battle of the Day: Discraft Roach vs Discraft Luna
Two Discraft putters with wildly different personalities square off today. The Roach brings straight, glidey control, while the Luna leans torque-resistant and reliably overstable. If you’re deciding on a putting putter, a tee putter, or a workhorse approach disc, this comparison will highlight which mold slots into your bag—and where.
Quick Flight Numbers


Roach
Pros
- Neutral 2/4/0/1 flight holds a straight line with a gentle, predictable finish—perfect for point-and-shoot putts and touch approaches.
- Glide 4 carries long bids and floaty throw-ins without extra effort, ideal for circle 2 and downhill greens.
- Low fade (1) keeps hyzer-flips and turnovers from fighting back too hard, making line shaping simple for newer arms.
Cons
- Extra glide can sail past the basket on windy or fast greens if speed control lapses.
- Lower speed and minimal fade offer less wind stability and torque resistance on forehands or power drives.
Luna
Pros
- Overstable 3/3/0/3 ends with a confident dump, giving a consistent hyzer finish for approaches and headwind putts.
- Handles torque well—great for fan-grip forehands and committed backhands where you must trust the fade.
- Speed 3 with lower glide 3 reduces float and blow-bys on aggressive, spinny putts.
Cons
- Strong fade can cause early hyzer-out on straight lines or touchy tunnel shots.
- Lower glide demands more commitment on long bids and may feel “heavy” for beginners.
Head-to-Head
- Straight putts and laser approaches: Roach tracks truer with less finish; Luna will hyzer out.
- Windy circles and headwind putts: Luna’s fade 3 wins; Roach can drift or lift.
- Backhand vs forehand: Roach excels at touch backhands and floaty anhyzers; Luna shines on controlled forehands and power hyzers.
- Tee shots under ~250 ft: Pick Luna when you need a guaranteed finish; choose Roach for dead-straight tunnels.
- Player skill: Newer players get easier distance and line-holding from the Roach; experienced arms leverage the Luna for wind control and OS approaches.
Verdict
If you want a neutral, glidey putter that makes straight putting and touch backhand lines feel automatic, the Roach is the safe, confidence-building pick. If you need a driving/approach putter with real bite at the end—something trustworthy in wind and on forehands—reach for the Luna. Many bags benefit from both: Roach for straight work and floaty bids; Luna for reliable fade, gap-swinging hyzers, and wind insurance.