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Siux Beat Hybrid 3 2026

Siux Beat Hybrid 3 2026

A friendly tear-drop racket with easy ball exit and a soft touch that keeps defense calm and point building simple.

By Jorge Masta

Our Take

Power6.1
Control6.8
Rebound7.2
Maneuverability6
Sweet spot6.6
Compare

Shape

Tear

Weight

355 - 375 gr

Touch

Medium-Soft

Core

EVA

Faces

Fiberglass

Frame

Fiberglass

What we like

  • Easy ball exit
  • Forgiving off-center hits
  • Stable *bandeja* control

What we don't

  • Limited finishing power
  • Maneuverability only decent
  • Less bite than carbon

Deals

Benefit from discount codes

PadelProShop

€99

5%

€94
PadelProShop

€99

5%

€94

Updated on 17 May (shipping cost not calculated)

Siux Beat Hybrid 3 2026

The Siux Beat Hybrid 3 2026 is a friendly, easygoing racket with a clear bias toward comfort and control from the back of the court. It doesn’t try to bully points. Instead, it helps you keep the ball in play, build the rally, and defend without feeling like you’re wrestling the frame.

I read it as a racket for players who want something forgiving and straightforward, especially if they’re still cleaning up contact or just prefer a softer, more accessible response. It gives confidence fast. What it doesn’t give you is much free power. If you want a racket that finishes points for you, this is not that.

Technical analysis

Shape & balance

The Tear shape sits in that middle ground between attacking intent and everyday usability. In practice, it feels more controlled than explosive, with enough presence in the upper part of the head to help on overheads, but not so much that it becomes awkward from the back of the court.

Balance is sensible rather than adventurous. I wouldn’t call it especially head-light, but it never feels top-heavy either. That makes it easy to live with in longer exchanges. Maneuverability is decent, though not sharp. If you’re used to very quick rackets, you’ll notice this one asks for a bit more effort on fast hand exchanges.

Materials & construction

Siux keeps things simple with fiberglass on the frame and fiberglass on the faces, plus an EVA core with a Medium-Soft feel. That combo explains most of the racket’s personality: easy ball exit, a cushioned touch, and a response that doesn’t punish imperfect contact too hard.

I like the way this construction softens the impact without turning mushy. Off-center hits still hold together well, and that forgiveness is one of the main reasons this racket feels approachable. The trade-off is obvious. You don’t get the crisp bite or the explosive rebound you’d expect from stiffer carbon builds.

On-court feel

Baseline play

From the baseline, this racket makes defense feel manageable. Blocks come out with little drama, and the ball exits the face cleanly even when you’re stretched or late. That easy response helps a lot on low-driven lobs and on those awkward balls that land under pressure.

I also found it helpful when trying to reset points. It doesn’t force you into a perfect swing. You can get the ball back deep with fairly relaxed mechanics, which is exactly why improving players often get along with this kind of racket. The downside is that it won’t add much venom if you’re trying to turn defense into immediate attack.

At the net

At the net, it plays in a controlled, comfortable way. Volleys have enough output to keep pressure on, but not so much that the racket runs away from you. That makes it easy to block and redirect, especially in fast exchanges where timing matters more than raw punch.

What it doesn’t do especially well is finish through the opponent with heavy weight of shot. You can accelerate the ball, sure, but the frame doesn’t give you that extra snap some more offensive rackets provide. For players who live on sharp counterattacks, that will be noticeable.

Bandeja and víbora

This is probably where the Siux makes the most sense. The touch is friendly, the ball comes off cleanly, and I never felt like I had to force the swing to keep the bandeja stable. The víbora has enough bite for placement and pacing, but not much aggression.

It’s a useful racket for building points overhead rather than hunting winners every time. If your game is more about consistency, angle, and control than about ending rallies with one big swing, these shots feel natural.

Conclusion

I see the Siux Beat Hybrid 3 2026 as a comfortable, forgiving racket for players who value easy handling and a smooth feel more than raw power. It rewards clean rally management and makes defensive work less stressful.

Its biggest strength is how accessible it feels. The biggest compromise is obvious too: there’s only so much punch here, and the maneuverability is good rather than exceptional. If you want a racket that helps you stay organized and confident in long points, this one makes sense. If your game leans hard toward finishing overheads, you’ll probably outgrow it.

What other reviewers say

  1. PadelScouten

    The review frames it as a versatile, very friendly racket with easy ball output and a medium-soft feel that helps players build confidence without demanding perfect technique. It stands out more for comfort and forgiveness in defense than for raw finishing power.

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