Gift guides for disc golf players are almost uniformly useless for anyone past the beginner stage — they either list beginner starter sets or recommend premium competition discs that require expert technique to fly correctly. This guide is for the intermediate player who already has a 3-disc starter set and plays courses regularly. Every pick is grounded in what Disc Nation Austin, Another Round Austin, and Drop Zone Disc Golf actually stock and recommend, cross-referenced against r/discgolf intermediate bag-building threads.
The disc picks here — Buzzz, Roc3, TeeBird, Destroyer — form a natural bag upgrade progression: two mids for different wind conditions, a fairway driver for controlled distance, and a distance driver for when arm speed justifies the power. Buy one or buy all four; any single disc from this set is a meaningful upgrade from a beginner starter.
The Picks
Discraft Buzzz ESP Mid-Range
The Buzzz is the single most-recommended mid-range in disc golf’s enthusiast community — Disc Nation Austin lists it as a staff-highlighted mid, and it surfaces in virtually every r/discgolf bag-building thread for intermediate players. Its 5/4/-1/1 flight numbers produce the dead-straight line intermediates need to start shaping intentional hyzer and anhyzer approaches. ESP plastic holds up far longer than budget DX alternatives.
- Holds any line — hyzer, flat, or anhyzer — with minimal turn punishment, letting intermediates learn controlled shot-shaping
- ESP plastic is grippy in humid conditions, more durable than baseline plastic, and ages into a slightly understable workhorse
- Universally stocked at all three identified Austin specialty retailers — can be tested in-store before buying
- At 170-172g can feel heavy for players with lower arm speed
- Nearly every intermediate already owns or has thrown one — not a surprising gift if they’re active in the community
Innova Champion Roc3 Mid-Range
Where the Buzzz flies straight, the Roc3 fights back — it’s the overstable mid that holds a reliable forward fade in headwinds and on flex shots. Disc Nation Austin explicitly stocks the Roc line as a staff-highlighted mid-range. Champion Roc3 is the durable plastic upgrade from the DX Roc most players received in their Innova beginner set. Paul McBeth’s signature disc.
- Predictable 0/3 stability means it reliably finishes on a fade line — trustworthy in wind when a neutral disc won’t hold
- Champion plastic maintains flight characteristics far longer than DX baseline — stays in the bag for years
- Physically distinct feel from the Buzzz so the player immediately knows which mid they’re pulling
- Too overstable for intermediates still developing arm speed below approximately 280 feet
- Colors are random from Amazon; specialty stores like Disc Nation let you pick the actual disc
Innova Champion TeeBird Fairway Driver
Disc Nation Austin’s explicitly staff-highlighted fairway driver and the most-cited answer to ‘what fairway driver should I graduate to after the Leopard?’ in r/discgolf intermediate threads. Speed 7 with 5 glide and 0 turn means an intermediate throwing 280–350 feet gets reliable straight-to-slight-fade flights without the snap-speed threshold a distance driver demands.
- Speed 7 is the sweet spot for intermediates — slower than a distance driver so control isn’t sacrificed, faster than a mid-range so real yardage gains are measurable
- Zero turn makes it wind-resistant and forehand-friendly — predictable in both throwing styles
- Explicitly staff-picked at Disc Nation Austin
- Champion plastic is stiff and can feel slick in cold weather — Star plastic TeeBird is an alternative for grippier feel
- Players already throwing a Leopard3 who want something decisively more overstable may find the distinction feels subtle at first
Innova Star Destroyer Distance Driver
Disc Nation Austin’s staff-highlighted distance driver and the most-discussed disc for players making the jump from fairway to distance driver. An intermediate already throwing 280+ feet with consistent hyzer release has the arm speed to make the Destroyer work. Star plastic survives the rocks, roots, and trees that come with aggressive distance throws on Austin-area courses.
- Speed 12 — intermediates who have been maxing their TeeBird will see immediate measurable distance on clean throws
- Star plastic is grippier and more durable than Champion in rocky terrain — resists edge damage that permanently alters flight
- 568 Infinite Discs community reviews at 4.65/5 — unusually strong data signal for a specialty product
- Requires 300+ feet arm speed and consistent release angle — an intermediate at the lower end will see hard over-fade on every throw
- Not a beginner-to-intermediate bridge disc; works best for players already playing courses regularly
Dynamic Discs Trooper Disc Golf Backpack
Every intermediate playing courses regularly outgrows a starter tote within months — the Trooper solves this with a true backpack build (padded straps, rigid base, ventilated back panel) at $39.99. Dynamic Discs bags are stocked at Austin-area specialty retailers. At 1 lb 12 oz the Trooper does not punish players walking the hilly terrain of Austin-area courses like Circle C or Zilker.
- 18+ disc main compartment plus top putter pocket and three side pockets — enough for a proper intermediate bag build
- Padded back panel and shoulder straps are a genuine quality-of-life upgrade from any canvas tote
- At $39.99 the lowest-risk upgrade — a player who later steps up to a premium bag will still use the Trooper as a secondary or car bag
- Single water bottle pocket and narrow top opening make in-round disc access slower than $70+ bags
- Can tip backward on slopes when not fully loaded
MVP Black Hole Lite 24-Chain Disc Golf Basket
An intermediate who practices only on-course is limited to one or two rounds per week. A backyard basket turns every spare 20 minutes into a putting session — and putting is where intermediate scores improve fastest. The Black Hole Lite’s 24-chain dual-tier configuration is PDGA-regulation size. MVP’s zero-weak-pockets chain design eliminates cut-throughs that plague cheaper baskets. Another Round Austin operates one in-store for customer testing.
- 24 equidistant chains in dual-tier configuration — every made putt is a genuine make that builds transferable muscle memory
- Under-one-minute assembly and 26 lbs makes it portable enough for park sessions
- Two-year limited warranty and all-metal construction — a multi-year investment that retains resale value
- At $134.95 it is the most expensive pick in this set — requires confidence the recipient will practice at home consistently
- 26 lbs is not light enough for bicycle transport — a car-transport item
Innova Tour Microfiber Disc Golf Towel
In Austin’s summer humidity, wet hands cause release inconsistency that no disc upgrade can fix. The Innova Tour Towel uses 100% waffle-weave polyester that wicks faster than smooth microfiber, and the center fabric loop clips directly onto any bag strap carabiner. This is the lowest-cost item in the set and the one most intermediates overlook despite universal community endorsement — the insider-knowledge gift that signals the giver understood the hobby.
- Waffle-weave polyester absorbs disc moisture and hand sweat faster than smooth microfiber — meaningfully improves grip consistency across an 18-hole round
- Fabric loop design is simpler and more durable than snap or grommet clips
- At $12.99 the lowest-cost, highest-gift-intelligence pick in the set
- Loop attachment requires a separate carabiner (not included) — available for pennies at any hardware store
- Designs are course-map themed and specific designs may be out of stock seasonally
What to skip
Skip distance drivers for players still throwing under 280 feet — they will fly hard left (RHBH) every time and cause more frustration than the disc is worth. Skip beginner starter sets (wrong level). Skip any disc marked ‘distance driver, speed 13+’ — these require arm speeds and technique that intermediate players have not yet developed. And skip disc golf-themed merchandise (keychains, stickers, hats) unless you know the specific club affiliation and colorway the recipient prefers.
The Buzzz, the Roc3, and the Dynamic Discs Trooper bag together cover the two most common intermediate upgrade needs (mid-range precision and a proper carry system) at well under $80 combined. If you’re adding one disc to an intermediate’s bag and aren’t sure which one, the Buzzz is the safest pick — it’s the community’s most universal mid-range recommendation across skill levels and is stocked at every Austin specialty retailer for in-person examination before buying.







