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I know it's being a while since Rakza Z came into the market, and since the TTD team did a fantastic review on it and compared the rubber to the Dignics 09c, but since I have played with the rubber for a fair amount of time (so it was an easy review), and the new Razka 7 Hard came into the market (so people have been asking me how the Rakza Z still is in 2026), I thought to make a quick in-depth review of it.
I used the Yasaka Sweden Extra and the DHS Wang Chuqin to review it this time, having tried it before on the Nittaku Violin and Acoustic, and the DHS Long 3. It was first on the YSE, and then moved it to the WCQ (which has a different head size), it's not like I don't know how to cut rubbers if you notice that in the blog photo (which is a bit true anyways hahaha).
Anyways, probably not a super controversial post this time, I still think is a good and controlled linear hybrid rubber in 2026, and I also still think that it has more control and a better price than the Dignics 09c for example, and that for many medium level amateurs, the difference will not justify the price increase. But you can let me know what you think as always, I enjoy a good conversation, so bring it on!
Here is the full review: https://www.tabletennisequipmenthelp.com/blog/rakza-z-review
And here is the TL;DR if you are in a hurry or don't want to click on the whole thing:
Hope you like it and let me know your thoughts!
Thanks,
Victor
PS. Next on the roadmap is Nuzn 45/48, and also Bluegrip C2/S2, with comparisons on those, and after that, I have things like Loki Arthur China, Big Dipper V, Sanwei Gear, and a lot more, so I won't be bored for a while
I used the Yasaka Sweden Extra and the DHS Wang Chuqin to review it this time, having tried it before on the Nittaku Violin and Acoustic, and the DHS Long 3. It was first on the YSE, and then moved it to the WCQ (which has a different head size), it's not like I don't know how to cut rubbers if you notice that in the blog photo (which is a bit true anyways hahaha).
Anyways, probably not a super controversial post this time, I still think is a good and controlled linear hybrid rubber in 2026, and I also still think that it has more control and a better price than the Dignics 09c for example, and that for many medium level amateurs, the difference will not justify the price increase. But you can let me know what you think as always, I enjoy a good conversation, so bring it on!
Here is the full review: https://www.tabletennisequipmenthelp.com/blog/rakza-z-review
And here is the TL;DR if you are in a hurry or don't want to click on the whole thing:
| Category | Rakza Z |
|---|---|
| Weight | On the heavier side, usually around 52g cut |
| Sponge feeling | Hard hybrid sponge feeling but feels softer than what Yasaka says it is |
| Spin potential | Very high, it's one of the key characteristics of the rubber |
| Speed & Gears | High gears, medium-slow at first, fast if you activate it properly |
| Throw angle | High-ish throw, but not as high as Dignics 09c |
| Loops | Very good for any kind of loops |
| Serves | A lot of spin and control on serves |
| Flicks | Easy backhand flicks due to higher throw angle |
| Pushes | A lot of spin on wrist-based pushes, can drop ball short easily |
| Blocks | Easier to block than with Dignics 09c, but not super easy |
| Flat hits | Not the best rubber for flat hitting |
| Boosting | Not needed for amateur players |
| Price | Average, usually around 40-50 euros |
| Durability | Very good, lasts a long time |
Hope you like it and let me know your thoughts!
Thanks,
Victor
PS. Next on the roadmap is Nuzn 45/48, and also Bluegrip C2/S2, with comparisons on those, and after that, I have things like Loki Arthur China, Big Dipper V, Sanwei Gear, and a lot more, so I won't be bored for a while
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