
You know the situation: you want “a top racket” and you end up looking at the Adidas Metalbone 2026… and suddenly the Metalbone HRD+ 2026 appears as well. Same family, same looks, but they don’t feel the same on court. And that’s exactly where many players go wrong: they buy “the hardest one because it’s pro”, and two weeks later they’re frustrated on every defensive ball.
Here is the clear comparison: what’s the difference, what do you gain, what do you give up, and which one suits you best?
The difference in one sentence:
- Metalbone 2026 = aggressive all-rounder with more control and comfort.
- Metalbone HRD+ 2026 = same concept, but with a harder core: more “bite” and explosiveness, less forgiveness.
What do they have in common?
Both are top-tier 2026 rackets and share the same foundation:
- Diamond Oversize shape (power oriented)
- CustomWeight / Weight & Balance System (tune balance and weight)
- Rough surface (Spin Blade Decal) for extra spin
- Carbon Aluminized 16K face
- 38 mm profile and carbon frame
- Improved grip/ergonomics and vibration dampening
So the build quality and finish are premium for both. The big difference lies inside.
The core: where everything starts
Metalbone 2026 – EVA Soft Performance
This provides a semi-firm, elastic response. You get power, but the racket also helps you with:
- blocking balls
- difficult off-center shots
- long matches (less strain on arm and shoulder)
Metalbone HRD+ 2026 – EVA High Recovery Density (HRD)
HRD+ feels drier and harder. The ball leaves the racket faster, especially on:
- volleys you want to slice aggressively
- víboras and bandejas with extra bite
- smashes where you want to finish the point
But: HRD+ forgives less if your timing or contact isn’t perfect.
On court: what do you really feel?
Power and smash
HRD+ wins here. More explosiveness and easier point finishing.
Metalbone is still powerful, but slightly more controllable.
If smashing is your main weapon → HRD+.
If you build points and finish when the moment is right → Metalbone.
Control and precision
Metalbone feels calmer and gives slightly more margin.
HRD+ rewards clean shots but demands better timing.
For variation and placement → Metalbone.
Defense
Metalbone is clearly more forgiving: easier blocking, lobs and resets.
HRD+ punishes off-center hits more: the ball can shoot off harder.
Defense important? Metalbone.
Comfort (arm/shoulder)
Metalbone is the safer choice.
HRD+ isn’t necessarily “dangerous”, but it is more demanding: if you play a lot or are sensitive, you’ll feel it faster.
If you have elbow issues or doubts → Metalbone.
Which one fits your profile?
Choose the Metalbone 2026 if you:
- are an all-round attacking player (attack and defend)
- like control during fast rallies
- often play long matches
- don’t want a racket that punishes every small mistake
Choose the Metalbone HRD+ 2026 if you:
- are a true finisher: smash, víbora, aggressive volleys
- have the technique to handle a harder feel
- prefer a dry, direct contact
- like to finish points at the net
Is the CustomWeight system actually useful?
Yes — if you actually use it.
- More weight at the top → more power, heavier ball, stronger smash
- Less weight / lower balance → faster and more maneuverable, better in defense
PACE-style tip: don’t test 20 configurations. Start simple:
- Play with the default setup.
- Add a little weight if you lack power.
- If you feel slower or struggle in defense: remove some again.
Quick choice guide
- I want maximum brute power → Metalbone HRD+ 2026
- I want power with control and comfort → Metalbone 2026
- I’m intermediate and unsure → almost always Metalbone 2026
- I’m advanced and play aggressively → HRD+ works great if your arm can handle it
Conclusion
The two rackets look like brothers, but on court they are more like:
- Metalbone 2026 = the smart attacker
- Metalbone HRD+ 2026 = the finisher with a hammer
