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Vibora Titan Black 15K Twill 2026

Vibora Titan Black 15K Twill 2026

A diamond-shaped attack racket with heavy overhead weight, lively ball exit, and enough composure to keep the rally alive.

By Jorge Masta

Our Take

Power9.6
Control8.6
Rebound8.4
Maneuverability8.1
Sweet spot8.3
Compare

Shape

Diamond

Weight

360 - 375 gr

Touch

Medium

Core

EVA PRO

Faces

15K Twill carbon

Frame

Carbon fiber

What we like

  • High balance powers overheads
  • Volleys carry pace easily
  • Clean *bandeja* and *víbora*

What we don't

  • Defense demands cleaner preparation
  • Off-center hits lose ball
  • Less agile from baseline

Vibora Titan Black 15K Twill 2026

Vibora Titan Black 15K Twill 2026 is an attack-first racket with a clear personality: high balance, a diamond shape, and enough punch to make overheads feel dangerous without turning it into a brick in the hand. I see it as a racket for players who already like to take the initiative and want their frame to help them finish points.

It has that offensive bias I expect from this mold, but it is not just a one-trick smasher. The EVA PRO core and the Carbono Twill 15K faces give it a firmer, more controlled response than a pure cannon, so it still keeps some order when the pace drops.

Technical analysis

Shape & balance

The diamond shape and high balance are the first things you feel. This racket wants to live above the shoulder line. It helps on volleys, bandejas, and anything overhead because it carries momentum well through the contact point.

That comes with a cost. From the back of the court, it is not the quickest frame to move, and it asks for cleaner preparation than a rounder, lower-balanced racket. If your defense is built on compact, lazy blocks, this one will make you work harder.

Materials & construction

The fiberglass frame keeps the structure from feeling overly harsh, while the Carbono Twill 15K faces add firmness and a more direct ball response. The result is a medium feel that leans clearly toward attack, but still leaves room for control on faster exchanges.

The EVA PRO core is part of why it does not collapse into pure stiffness. Ball exit is solid, especially when you commit to the shot, but it does not give you a free ride on off-center hits. Mishits lose more than they would on a softer, more forgiving racket.

On-court feel

Baseline play

From the baseline, I had to stay disciplined. Defensive lobs come off with decent length if I get under the ball properly, but the racket does not rescue rushed contact. Blocks are acceptable, yet I would not call this an easy defensive frame.

When the point slows down, it rewards tidy technique more than instinct. There is enough control to reset, but you feel the head-heavy character every time you try to be late or casual.

At the net

This is where it starts making sense. Volleys come out with real intent, and the racket helps you add pace without having to swing wildly. It feels stable enough to press forward and keep pressure on the opponent.

I also liked it on fast exchanges because the response is crisp. Still, it is not the kind of racket that lets you flick everything on reflex. You need your hand ready and your contact clean.

Bandeja and víbora

These are probably its best shots. The frame helps the ball travel with easy depth, and there is enough bite to keep the shot aggressive without losing all control. I felt more help on the bandeja than on softer, slower rackets, especially when looking to push opponents back.

The víbora also benefits from the high balance. Once you get the timing right, the racket adds pace without feeling unstable. It is honest, though: if your technique is sloppy, it will show.

Conclusion

This is a racket for players who want an offensive tool with real overhead performance. If you like to finish points through the net and your game already includes a solid smash, bandeja, and aggressive volleys, it fits that plan well.

What you trade off is ease. It is less agile than lighter, softer rackets and more demanding in defense. For me, that is the deal here: strong attack, good pace, and enough control to stay usable, but no shortcuts when the rally turns messy.

What other reviewers say

  1. Padelfulen

    The racket is presented as clearly attack-first: its diamond shape and high balance help on volleys, trays, and overheads, where it adds pace and easy ball output. In exchange, it asks for more technique on defense and on off-center hits because it is not the quickest or softest option.

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