Skyquest Discs is crashing the party this week as our second Featured Brand—because why stop at one when we can have two?
Wait… wasn’t Kestrel the brand of the week?
Yep. It still is. But since both Kestrel and Skyquest are smaller brands (and we like giving the underdogs some love), we’re running a double feature. Yesterday was all about Kestrel. Today, it’s Skyquest’s turn in the spotlight.
A Little History (and a Lot of Grip)
Skyquest has been quietly making discs in the Pacific Northwest for over a decade (okay, they probably haven’t made any recently, but we still have a stash of discs from the last time they made them in our warehouse). If you’ve never heard of them, you’re not alone—poor marketing and a “hobby brand” approach meant they never really blew up. But man… the discs they did make? Pure magic.
I still remember the first time I threw a Skyquest Medusa over 300 feet. It was love at first flight. The stamp was a little scandalous for my liking, but I gave that Medusa some more clothes with a sharpie.
Sadly, after releasing the Chainzilla, they stopped making new molds, but their signature plastic blend lives on—and it’s the good stuff.
Ultra-grippy, confidence-inspiring, and built to give your throws more spin and glide, Skyquest plastic just feels right in your hand.
The Skyquest Lineup
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Medusa – 11-speed driver with a nice, understable flight. Perfect for hyzer flips, controlled turnovers, and effortless distance for us non-pro mortals.
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Lucky 13 – The even more understable sibling. If you’re newer to the game or just want to see a disc glide forever, this is your jam.
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Chainzilla – A putter with personality (and a name that sounds like it should be terrorizing Tokyo). Unique feel, solid performance, and a fun change of pace for your short game.
Why Now’s the Time to Try Skyquest
This week, all Skyquest discs are on sale. That’s your cue to finally try this underrated brand and see why a cult following still swears by them.
Grab one before they disappear—because Skyquest molds aren’t exactly flooding the market these days, and they might not ever run the discs again. And trust me… every throw feels better when your disc is this grippy.

