Yeet Street Discs Review

PXL 20250731 172525194 scaled Yeet Street Discs Review

I just discovered a new brand of discs (okay, they aren’t actually new, but I didn’t know about them until today) and had to test them out. These are Yeet Street Discs.

Yeet Street is a disc golf retailer based in the Triangle area of North Carolina. Like many successful disc golf retailers, they’ve decided to dabble in launching a disc line under their own brand. While Yeet Street isn’t technically a disc manufacturer, they follow the OEM outsourcing model—similar to Birdie Disc Golf and Infinite Discs—by partnering with other companies to produce their discs.

Currently, they offer only two molds, but interestingly, it appears they are working with two different manufacturers. Their putter, the Kyrios, seems to be made by Gateway Disc Sports. Their midrange, the Petra, is openly admitted to be manufactured by MVP Disc Sports. I find it amusing that they don’t acknowledge the producer of the Kyrios—it’s possible they’re using a local plastic injection molding company or outsourcing it to a factory overseas. But I’ve touched and thrown enough discs to be 90% confident the Kyrios comes from Gateway. The plastic feel and stamp work scream Gateway to me.

Now, enough about where Yeet Street Discs come from—the real question is: How do they fly?

Kyrios Putter

Yeet Street Kyrios Putter in the Shade

I can’t believe how straight this putter flies. It’s labeled with a fade of 1, but honestly, the 170g Kyrios I tested flies with virtually no fade. If anything, it has a slight high-speed turn. Because of its straight flight, it’s excellent for long putts, approach shots, and driving off the tee.

The Thorium plastic feels amazing—very reminiscent of one of Gateway’s better blends. (If you know Gateway, you know they have hundreds of plastic variations, often labeling each batch differently rather than calling it a manufacturing inconsistency.) While inconsistent, Gateway’s plastic always feels great for putters.

All in all, I like the Kyrios. It’s not going to bump my N-Blend Alpacas out of the bag, but if I had to switch, I could live with the Kyrios as my go-to putter.

Petra Midrange

Yeet Street Petra Midrange

The Petra might be my favorite new midrange. My 177g green Petra in Palladium plastic is more overstable than the flight ratings suggest. I expected a laser-straight flight, but on backhand throws, it has a solid stability with dependable fade.

Where this disc really shines—and why it’s currently in my bag—is on forehand throws. The slightly rounded rim gives it solid glide, while the perfectly flat top makes it ideal for forehands. It feels great in the hand and has excellent high-speed stability. I wouldn’t crank it full power, but for 250–275 ft forehand lasers, it’s point-and-shoot accurate.

Compared to the Discraft Buzzz, the Petra feels sleeker, glides farther, and has a touch more stability. I suspect it might be the same mold as the TSA Pathfinder, but I don’t remember liking the Pathfinder’s flight nearly as much. Maybe it’s the stiffer plastic, or maybe this run is just tuned right—but whatever it is, the Petra gives me the perfect flight.

Yeet Street Discs are a blast to throw, and I hope they keep expanding their lineup. They clearly know how to pick good molds.

 

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