Axiom Bokeh
THIS ITEM IS AVAILABLE FOR PRE-ORDER ONLY! MVP HAS NOT ANNOUNCED A RELEASE DATE YET!
Axiom Bokeh is a Simon Line fairway driver built for clean, repeatable control. It is often described as a slightly more stable Crave. Think straight lasers, easy placement, and a gentle finish.
Thrown flat, the Bokeh pushes straight with minimal drift. It holds speed, then adds a small fade late. That late fade is useful on tight fairways. It helps you land center cut instead of sliding wide.
Give it mild hyzer and it carries on a true hyzer line. It does not dump early. On light anhyzer, it holds the angle and pans slowly. It is a great “turning fairway” for players who dislike flippy molds.
Forehand players get a lot from this shape. The rim feels like a fairway, not a distance driver. It stays composed on straight forehands and short placement shots. Expect a soft finish, not a big flare.
In calm air, it feels point-and-shoot. In light headwinds, it stays straighter longer than many neutral fairways. In stronger wind, add hyzer and keep the nose down. If it still turns, step up to a more overstable control driver.
Flight: 7 | 6 | 0 | 1. The Bokeh is a neutral-stable fairway that stays on plane and finishes forward. Official Bokeh overview.
Why throw the Axiom Bokeh?
- Straight fairway flights with a gentle, forward fade.
- More wind tolerance than a true neutral fairway.
- Trustworthy hyzers that carry instead of dumping.
- Forehand-friendly control for tight landing zones.
- Great bridge between flippy fairways and beefy 7-speeds.
Plastics
Neutron (Simon Line): premium opaque plastic with great grip and durability. Neutron tends to keep the Bokeh’s straight-stable flight for a long time.
Flight numbers
- Speed: 7
- Glide: 6
- Turn: 0
- Fade: 1
Similar Discs
Axiom Crave • Axiom Rhythm • MVP Servo • Streamline Drift
FAQs
Bokeh vs Crave: what changes on the course?
The Bokeh is made to be the “more stable Crave” slot. Expect less drift on flat throws and a cleaner finish. If your Crave turns in light wind, the Bokeh is the safer play.
What’s the best line for the Axiom Bokeh on wooded fairways?
Start flat for straight push and soft fade. For a tight tunnel, add a small hyzer and keep the nose down. You will get carry without a big skip.
Is the Bokeh good for forehand players who hate overstable discs?
Yes. It can handle a clean forehand release, but it finishes gently. That means more placement and less flare at the end.
Does the Bokeh work as a “one fairway driver” for developing arms?
It can. Many players will see straight flights without perfect form. If you are new to 7-speeds, choose a lighter weight for easier glide.
Bokeh vs Rhythm vs Servo: which one fits your long straight shot?
Choose Rhythm when you want easy turn and a mild finish. Choose Servo when you want more fade and stability. Choose Bokeh when you want a neutral laser with a gentle finish and better wind tolerance than a pure neutral fairway.