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Lok Easy Flow Gen 2 2026

Lok Easy Flow Gen 2 2026

A forgiving round racket with a medium-soft touch, quick handling, and the kind of control that keeps points tidy under pressure.

By Jorge Masta

Our Take

Power7
Control7.7
Rebound8.8
Maneuverability8.5
Sweet spot8.9
Compare

Shape

Round

Weight

360 - 375 gr

Touch

Medium-Soft

Core

EVA

Faces

Flex carbon fiber

Frame

Carbon fiber

What we like

  • Large, forgiving sweet spot
  • Quick handling in fast exchanges
  • Comfortable, controlled ball exit

What we don't

  • Limited flat-smash punch
  • Little help on attacking drives
  • Polite on finishing volleys

Deals

Benefit from discount codes

PadelProShop

€180

5%

€171
PadelProShop

€180

5%

€171

Updated on 3 Jun (shipping cost not calculated)

Lok Easy Flow Gen 2 2026

The Lok Easy Flow Gen 2 2026 has a very clear identity: easy handling, a big margin for error, and a comfortable response that favors control over violence. It feels like a racket built to help you stay in the point, not one that tries to win the point for you with raw punch.

I see it as a round, user-friendly option for players who value security in defense and clean execution at the net. It is not trying to be a cannon. It is trying to make your padel simpler, and in that role it does a lot right.

Technical analysis

Shape & balance

The round shape and the fairly even balance are doing most of the work here. That combination keeps the racket quick in the hand and reduces the feeling of drag on faster exchanges. I never had the sense that I was fighting the frame to get the racket into position. It moves well, especially when you need to react late or block a fast ball.

That also explains why the sweet spot feels so generous. You do not need to be perfect with contact to get a stable response. For players who miss the center more often than they’d like, that matters. What you give up is raw leverage. This is not a head-heavy frame that helps you bully the ball through court.

Materials & construction

The carbon fiber frame and Flex carbon fiber faces give it a crisp but not harsh response, and the EVA core sits in that Medium-Soft range that keeps the racket comfortable through long sessions. The touch is forgiving without feeling mushy. Ball exit is easy, but there is still enough structure to keep the shot honest.

That material mix fits the racket’s purpose well. It absorbs enough vibration to stay friendly on the arm, and it helps on off-center hits too. The trade-off is obvious: if you want a dry, explosive feel for hard finishing shots, this is not that racket. The construction is more about stability and repeatability.

On-court feel

Baseline play

From the back of the court, the Easy Flow Gen 2 feels calm and predictable. Defensive lobs come off with good length without needing a huge swing, and blocks stay under control even when the pace rises. I liked how little the racket punished me for defending under pressure. It makes the job easier when the rally is messy.

It also works nicely for placement-heavy players. If you want to roll the ball deep, change direction, or reset the point with a low-driven lob, the racket gives you a clean response. What it does not give you is much extra help on flat, aggressive drives. You have to supply your own pace.

At the net

At the net, it is quick enough to keep up in fast exchanges. Volleys feel tidy and easy to place, and the large sweet spot gives you confidence when the ball gets on you fast. I liked it most in controlled net play, where timing and direction matter more than brute force.

It is also stable enough for short, compact exchanges. That said, if you want a racket that adds weight to every attacking volley, this one stays on the polite side. It rewards clean hands more than hard hands.

Bandeja and víbora

This is probably one of the racket’s better areas. The easy handling helps a lot on the bandeja and víbora, where I want a racket that lets me repeat the same motion without effort. The response is secure, and the ball comes off with enough bite to keep pressure on the opponents.

I would not call it aggressive in this part of the game. It controls the shot well, but it does not inject extra violence into it. If your overhead game depends on heavy acceleration and finishing power, you will notice the ceiling pretty quickly.

Conclusion

I’d point this racket toward players who want comfort, control, and a big sweet spot more than outright power. It suits a weekly player who spends a lot of time defending, recycling points, and looking for clean contact rather than forcing winners.

What you trade off is obvious: flat-smash pop, heavy attacking output, and that extra punch some more offense-minded rackets give you. If your game is built around stability, placement, and easy handling, the Lok Easy Flow Gen 2 2026 makes a lot of sense. If you want your racket to do more of the finishing, it may feel a little too restrained.

What other reviewers say

  1. Padelfulen

    Reviewers describe it as very easy to maneuver and forgiving on off-center hits, with a large sweet spot and a medium-soft feel that favors control and comfort. It performs best in defense and placement-heavy net play, but does not add much extra punch for flat smashes or very aggressive offense.

  2. Padelreferencefr

    The racket is aimed at developing players who want control, forgiveness, and comfort, with the technical notes emphasizing stable balance and a generous sweet spot. The overall feel is one of security and stability in fast exchanges, but the emphasis is on consistency rather than raw power.

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