
Vibora Black Mamba EVO Pro White 2026
A round racket with easy ball exit, a generous sweet spot, and enough firmness at the net to stay composed in fast exchanges.
Our Take
Shape
Round
Weight
360 - 375 gr
Touch
Medium-Soft
Core
EVA Mix
Faces
Jacquard carbon
Frame
Carbon fiber
What we like
- Large forgiving sweet spot
- Quick handling at net
- Comfortable defensive ball exit
What we don't
- Limited smash finishing power
- Less punch on overheads
- Needs adjustment from stiffer frames

The Vibora Black Mamba EVO Pro White 2026 is a control-first round racket with a surprisingly lively response. I see it as one of those frames that makes long rallies easier to manage without feeling dead in attack.
What stands out most is how approachable it feels. The round shape, medium-soft feel, and EVA Mix core give it a friendly contact point, but it still has enough structure to keep the ball on a line. It is not built to bully the point. It is built to keep you in it, then let you accelerate when the opening appears.
Technical analysis
Shape & balance
The round mold and low-to-medium balance are doing most of the work here. That combination gives the racket a very large, forgiving sweet spot and makes it quick through the air. In practical terms, I can get the face set early, defend comfortably, and still recover fast for the next ball.
It never feels head-heavy or cumbersome at the net. That matters. You get easy handling on volleys and in fast exchanges, but the trade-off is obvious: it does not give you the heaviest finishing ball on overheads. If you want pure destruction on the smash, this is not that kind of racket.
Materials & construction
The fiberglass frame and Carbon Jacquard faces create a response that is firm enough to stay precise, but not so stiff that it punishes off-center contact. The feel is pleasant and easy on the arm, which I noticed especially in longer sessions. It has that accessible ball exit people often want from a medium-soft build.
The EVA Mix core helps it keep some punch without turning rigid. I would not call it explosive, but it does send the ball out cleanly when you accelerate the swing. Coming from a stiffer racket, there is a short adjustment period. Once you settle in, the touch becomes pretty natural.
On-court feel
Baseline play
From the back of the court, this racket is comfortable and reliable. Defensive lobs come off with good length, and blocks have enough rebound to keep pressure off your body when the pace rises. In off-the-wall play, I liked how it stayed manageable. It gives you control without feeling sluggish.
The key word is control with help. You still need to hit your spots, but the racket gives you a little extra margin when the rally gets messy. That is useful in weekly match play, where not every defensive ball arrives cleanly.
At the net
At the net, the Black Mamba EVO Pro White feels quick and tidy. Volleys are easy to place, and the racket reacts fast in short exchanges. I never felt like I had to fight the frame to get the face where I wanted it.
What it does not do is crush the ball for you. The response is firm enough to press opponents, but the power is progressive rather than explosive. That is fine if your game is built around construction and timing. Less so if you want every volley to feel like a hammer.
Bandeja and víbora
This is probably where the racket makes the most sense. The combination of maneuverability and a forgiving sweet spot makes overhead control quite easy. Bandejas come out with good length and decent bite, while víboras feel controlled rather than wild.
I would not call it a finishing racket from these shots. It prefers placement, pressure, and repeatability over outright violence. That is a real strength if you like to work the point at the net instead of forcing winners.
Conclusion
I’d put the Vibora Black Mamba EVO Pro White 2026 in the camp of players who want a comfortable, fast-handling racket with a strong defensive base and enough offense to keep opponents honest. It rewards clean timing and good court positioning more than raw swing speed.
What you give up is obvious: top-end smash power and that extra bite some stiffer rackets provide on overheads. If your game is built around control, mobility, and easy access to the sweet spot, this one fits that brief very well.
What other reviewers say
- PadelReviewes
The racket is presented as a very balanced option: it helps when defending from the back of the court and keeps control in long rallies. At the net it feels firm, and on attack it favors progressive power over outright explosive finishing.
- Racketguide.comen
The round shape, medium balance and medium feel make contact forgiving and easy to handle, especially on volleys and quick exchanges. In return, you give up some of the sharpest finishing punch on overheads.
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