
Vibora Titan Black Light 2026
A light diamond racket with quick handling, lively ball exit, and enough attacking bite to keep pressure high without feeling harsh.
Our Take
Shape
Diamond
Weight
320 - 240 gr
Touch
Medium-Soft
Core
EVA PRO
Faces
24K carbon
Frame
Carbon fiber
What we like
- Quick transitions and recovery
- Lively ball exit from baseline
- Natural *bandeja* and *víbora*
What we don't
- Small sweet spot
- Off-center blocks lose quality
- Not forgiving on late contact

Vibora Titan Black Light 2026 is a light, fast-feeling attacking racket with a surprisingly clean response for how easy it is to move. I see it as a tool for players who want to speed up transitions without giving up a real threat on overheads.
It sits in that tricky space between comfort and aggression. The diamond shape points it toward offense, but the low effort needed to swing it keeps it from feeling cumbersome. That combination is what gives it its own identity.
Technical analysis
Shape & balance
The diamond shape is doing the usual offensive job here, but the balance is what makes the racket feel different from a more classic power frame. It moves quickly, especially in exchanges at the net and in recovery situations, and that makes it easier to get the face into position early.
I do think that light, fast sensation comes with a trade-off. The sweet spot is not huge, so this is not one of those rackets that forgives lazy contact. When you hit clean, it behaves very well. When you don’t, the frame reminds you immediately.
Materials & construction
The fiberglass frame gives the structure a more comfortable base than a full-on hard power build, while the 24K carbon faces add a sharper, more connected response. That mix is probably why the racket feels lively without turning harsh on contact.
The EVA PRO core and medium-soft feel round things out nicely. I get good ball exit from the back court, but there is still enough firmness to keep the racket from floating on impact. It feels premium, yes, but more importantly it feels coherent. Nothing about the build seems random.
On-court feel
Baseline play
From the baseline, this racket is quick to handle and easy to get moving in defensive situations. I like how it helps me get the ball back with depth without having to force the swing. Off the wall, it responds well if my timing is decent, and that makes it useful in fast defensive exchanges.
What it does not do is rescue poor technique. The racket is maneuverable, but the smaller sweet spot means off-center blocks and awkward contact points lose quality fast. If you’re late, you’ll feel it.
At the net
At the net, the Titan Black Light feels alert. Volleys come off with good pace, and the racket has enough pop to let me press the point rather than just keep the ball in play. The response is lively, which helps in quick hands battles and on balls that arrive with less time to prepare.
It is not overly stiff, so I never felt like I had to wrestle it for direction. Still, I wouldn’t call it a pure control racket in tight net exchanges. It wants you to be assertive.
Bandeja and víbora
This is one of the racket’s better zones. The combination of maneuverability and ball output makes both the bandeja and víbora feel natural. I can accelerate the head without much effort, and the racket gives me enough response to keep the ball heavy.
The limitation is again forgiveness. If contact drifts away from the sweet spot, the quality drops faster than I’d like in these shots. Clean technique is rewarded; half-baked execution isn’t.
Conclusion
I’d point this racket toward players who want a quick, comfortable attacking frame and already have decent timing on overheads. It’s especially appealing if you like a light-feeling racket but still want enough punch to finish points or pressure opponents at the net.
The compromise is forgiveness. The sweet spot is not especially generous, so this is not the easiest option for sloppy days or passive contact. But if you value speed, easy handling, and solid attacking output in a lighter package, the Vibora Titan Black Light 2026 makes a strong case for itself.
What other reviewers say
- Pala Hackes
The review frames it as a lightweight racket that blends strong maneuverability with good ball output and real attacking punch, without feeling harsh at contact. It stands out both from the back of the court and at net, but the sweet spot is not especially large and rewards precision.
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