Why the Pixel Is Suddenly Everywhere (Jun 12, 2026 DiscList Sales)
Top-ranked discs on Friday June 12, 2026

If you only glance at the very top, you might think nothing happened this week. The Buzzz sits at #1 again, and at this point it feels less like a disc and more like a default setting. According to the latest DiscList rankings, based on weekly sales data dated Jun 12, 2026, the real story is the shuffling underneath the throne.
The headline act is Axiom’s Pixel, hopping from #4 to #2. That is not an accident. Putters do not usually spike because somebody threw one 520 feet on YouTube. They spike because real people, on real courses, get fed up with three-putting and decide to buy themselves a little hope. The Pixel’s numbers are basically a retail version of a deep breath. Stable, friendly, and the sort of thing you can hand to a mate without giving a ten-minute lecture.
At the same time, the Destroyer lumbers up from #6 to #4, because summer does this to us. The minute the weather improves, everyone starts shopping for distance like it’s a personality trait. I call it the convertible effect. In January, we buy sensible midranges. In June, we buy speed and swagger, then we spend the next round trying to stop it fading into a hedge. Still, there is a reason the Destroyer never truly goes away. It is familiar, it is aspirational, and it lets people feel like they have joined a club.
The neat twist is that Innova’s other stalwarts are quietly cashing in too. The Mako 3 rockets from #10 to #6, a proper little comeback from the sensible corner. The Wraith nudges up from #9 to #7 as well, which suggests a lot of players want something they can actually get up to speed without needing a personal trainer. Distance, yes. Punishment, no.
Then we have the week’s cold shower: MVP’s Trail drops from #5 to #12. That is a seven-place slide, and it screams “early excitement has met everyday reality”. Some discs are brilliant; some are brilliant in the hands of the one bloke at league night who also owns a rangefinder and talks about spin rates. When the wider crowd realises a disc asks for more than they want to give, it falls back to earth.
Elsewhere in the top tier, the Hex slips from #2 to #5, not because it suddenly became bad, but because popularity is a crowded bus. Axiom’s Crave holds at #3, which makes perfect sense. Control drivers are the compromise everyone pretends they do not need, right up until the moment they do.
And I cannot ignore the Berg, climbing from #12 to #8. The Berg is the disc golf equivalent of ordering water with your pint. Slightly smug, oddly satisfying, and typically the sign of someone trying to reduce unforced errors.
Want a final nerdy footnote from deeper down the list? The Prodigy NERF Putter jumps 459 places to #192. That is pure novelty and gifting behaviour, and I respect it. This sport is meant to be fun, after all.
Next week, I will be watching whether Pixel holds its nerve, and whether Trail bounces back once the early adopters stop shouting. See you Friday.
- 1 – Buzzz Stable
- 2 ▲ Pixel ↗ Heating Up Up 2 since Jun 05
- 3 – Crave Stable
- 4 ▲ Destroyer ↗ Heating Up Up 2 since Jun 05
- 5 ▼ Hex ↘ Stable Down 3 since Jun 05
- 6 ▲ Mako 3 ↗ Heating Up Up 4 since Jun 05
- 7 ▲ Wraith ↗ Heating Up Up 2 since Jun 05
- 8 ▲ Berg ↗ Heating Up Up 4 since Jun 05
- 9 ▼ Wave Stable Down 2 since Jun 05
- 10 ▼ Glitch ↘ Stable Down 2 since Jun 05
View the full Top 40 Golf Disc Rankings for this week.




