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Vatic Pro Prism V7 – Paddle Review

The Vatic Pro Prism V7 brings JOOLA Hyperion-level control and plow-through stability at a fraction of the cost of comparable premium paddles. It pairs foam-injected unibody walls with a raw Toray T700 carbon fiber face, delivering an elongated reach, elite spin, and the plush soft-game feel the Prism line is known for.

Vatic Pro Prism V7

Power
Control
Spin
Feel

Elite control, spin, and stability at $100. The Prism V7 proves you don’t need a premium price tag to get elongated, pro-level performance.

4.4
pros
Best-value elongated paddle
Elite spin generation
Arm-friendly plush feel
cons
Limited power ceiling
Slower at the net
Only 90-day warranty
SpecificationDetails
Price$100 (~$89 with discount codes)
Weight8.1–8.5 oz
CorePolymer with foam-inject unibody walls
Face MaterialRaw Toray T700 Carbon Fiber
Thickness16mm
Handle Length5.3″ (standard) or 5.6″ (long handle)
Grip Size4.25″
ShapeElongated (16.5″ × 7.5″)
Swing Weight128
Warranty90 days

Power

The foam-injected unibody build sits between older Gen 1 paddles and stiff thermoformed options. On paper, the heavier swing weight should deliver more pop than the Flash, but in practice the power ceiling is similar. Where the V7 wins is plow-through. On drives and put-aways, the extra mass carries through the ball and gives you depth without forcing the swing. Add lead tape at 3 and 9 to bump the power further.

Control

This is the V7’s best trick. The plush, non-thermoformed feel absorbs pace and lets you reset from anywhere on the court. Long dink battles stay comfortable. Third-shot drops land where you aim. The soft response means fast exchanges don’t get away from you, even when your opponent is redirecting hard balls at your chest. Augie Ge won an MLP Championship with a stock Prism V7, which says everything about what this paddle can do in the right hands.

Spin

The raw Toray T700 carbon fiber face is a spin monster. Reviewers have clocked it near 1,941 RPM, which is elite at any price and extraordinary at this one. Serves dip late, dinks shape naturally, and backhand slices give opponents fits. The surface isn’t spray-coated, so the grit holds up session after session instead of fading out after a few weeks.

Feel

The V7 has that signature Prism plushness, amplified by the elongated shape and heavier swing weight. Contact is soft and honest, with genuine feedback on every shot. The two polyurethane grip inserts absorb shock well, making this one of the more arm-friendly paddles out there if you’re dealing with elbow issues.

The sweet spot sits higher on the paddle face thanks to the elongated shape, which is great for drives and overheads but asks for cleaner contact on dinks than a hybrid would. The 128 swing weight gives you stability on off-center hits, though you’ll feel the paddle working harder at the net.

Intermediate to advanced players (3.5+) who want the extra reach of an elongated paddle without paying premium prices. Also a strong pick for tennis converts who prefer a longer lever and heavier feel on drives and serves.

Skip this if you need quick hands at the net, struggle to generate your own power, or want the maneuverable, nimble feel of a hybrid shape—go Prism Flash instead.

vs. JOOLA Hyperion CFS 16

The V7 is the closest dupe on the market. Nearly identical dimensions, same plush feel, same control-first playstyle. Hyperion has slightly more refinement and a stronger brand. The V7 delivers 90% of the performance at less than half the price.

vs. Vatic Pro Prism Flash

Same materials, same price, different shape. Flash is lighter (114 swing weight), more maneuverable, and better at the net. V7 has more reach, more stability, and more plow-through. Net players go Flash. Baseline and drive players go V7.

The Prism V7 competes with elongated paddles costing more than double. You get raw Toray T700 carbon fiber, foam-injected unibody walls, polyurethane shock-absorbing grip inserts, and the elongated shape that dominates at the pro level.

The smart buy for control-first players who want extra reach without overpaying just for a logo.

The Prism V7 delivers the elongated feel, spin, and control of paddles costing twice as much. The plush surface and raw carbon face elevate your soft game and extend your reach without asking you to compromise on feel.

Yes, the swing weight makes it slower than the Flash, and the power ceiling takes some adjusting to. But the value here is hard to argue with—elongated performance with T700 carbon that holds its grit, at a price that feels like a mistake.

If you’ve been eyeing the Hyperion or another premium elongated paddle and can’t justify the price, the Prism V7 is your answer. Elite elongated performance no longer requires elite spending—just smart shopping.

Is the Prism V7 good for beginners, or is it too much paddle?

It leans toward intermediate and advanced players (3.5+). The elongated shape demands cleaner contact than a hybrid, and the heavier swing weight rewards developed mechanics. If you’re a 2.5–3.0 player, the Prism Flash is a better starting point. But if you’re a developing 3.5 with tennis background, the V7 will grow with your game for years.

Which should I choose—V7 or Flash?
How does the 90-day warranty compare to other paddles?
Does the face lose spin over time?

Obsessed with the top pickleball gear, always chasing the perfect paddle, and sharing everything I learn.