I live the variety of sizes and with its design they are easy to hold. The sound produced by the different size picks are great
// Pick Comparison Guide
Every model.
Every model.
Every difference.
Explained.
19 models across two patented systems. Here's what makes each one different — and which one fits how you play.
Quick Reference
| Model | System | Size | Flex | Best For | Top Trait | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stealth | Beveled Apex | Standard | Medium | Lead, Sweeping, Bass | Clarity 82 | $5.99 |
| Stealth XL | Beveled Apex | Large | Medium | Large Hands, Strumming | Bottom 82 | $5.99 |
| Stealth Flex | Beveled Apex | Standard | Flexible | Acoustic, Strumming, Beginners | Flex 88 | $3.99 |
| Stealth Heavy | Beveled Apex | Standard | Rigid | Metal, Drop Tuning | Control 88 | $3.99 |
| Stealth III | Beveled Apex | Compact | Rigid | Fast Picking, Metal | Control 95 | $5.99 |
| Stealth III Medium | Beveled Apex | Standard | Rigid | All-Around, Rhythm & Lead | Control 93 | $8.49 |
| Stealth III XL | Beveled Apex | Large | Rigid | Fast Picking, Large Hands | Grip 95 | $5.99 |
| Attak | Ridged Tip | Standard | Medium | Rhythm, Acoustic, Strumming | Harmonic 85 | $3.99 |
| Ambush | Ridged Tip | Standard | Medium | Blues, 12-String Effect | Compress 88 | $3.99 |
| Earthtone | Ridged Tip | Standard | Medium | Prog Rock, Acoustic | Harmonic 98 | $8.99 |
| Blade II | Ridged Tip | Standard | Rigid | Heavy Guitar, Drop Tuning | Mids 88 | $3.99 |
| Blade III | Ridged Tip | Compact | Flexible | Precision Picking | Bright 92 | $3.99 |
| Surge | Ridged Tip | Standard | Medium | Acoustic, Strumming | Grit 88 | $3.99 |
| Surge II | Ridged Tip | Compact | Medium | Electric, All-Around | Attack 88 | $3.99 |
| Viper | Ridged Tip | Standard | Medium | Strumming, 3 Edges | Versatile 88 | $3.99 |
| Viper-Mini | Ridged Tip | Compact | Flexible | Precise Strumming | Versatile 88 | $3.99 |
| Juggernaut | Ridged Tip | Large | Rigid | Bass, Heavy Strings | Bass 95 | $5.99 |
| Fusion | Hybrid | Compact | Flexible | Rhythm & Lead, Beginners | Versatile 92 | $3.99 |
| Equilibrium | Hybrid | Standard | Medium | All-Around, Balanced | Versatile 98 | $8.49 |
Beveled Apex — Patented
Stealth Family
Speed, sweeping, and dynamic control. An angled slope to an apex point with engineered layers.
Precision · Control · Even Tone
The original. Curved-bevel tip glides across strings with consistent dynamic control. Cleans up lows/low mids for note clarity while producing an open, rounder bottom end. 12-node matrix grip.
Grip 78Clarity 82Bottom 80Control 80Flex 45
All the Stealth — Bigger Body
Everything the Stealth delivers in a larger format. Apex shoulder and broader point ideal for strumming. Punchy but smooth on bass.
Grip 80Clarity 80Bottom 82Control 78Flex 45
All the Stealth Benefits · More Flex
3× the flexibility of the 2mm Stealth. Same curved-bevel tip, same clarity. Nine-node grip. Apex point still handles precise playing at high BPMs.
Grip 74Clarity 80Bottom 82Control 72Flex 88
All the Stealth Control · More Body
Thicker version — more rigidity, slightly darker tone. Muted nine-node grip for comfort. Apex point excels at sweep and tremolo.
Grip 72Clarity 80Bottom 80Control 88Flex 12
Stealth vs Stealth XL
Same pick, different size. XL is for larger hands or players who want more surface area for strumming. Stealth standard is more precise for lead work.
Stealth vs Stealth Flex
Flex trades control for flexibility (1.3mm vs 2.0mm). Better for acoustic strumming and beginners. Standard Stealth is better for lead precision and speed.
Stealth vs Stealth Heavy
Heavy trades flexibility for maximum rigidity (3.33mm). Darker tone. Better for drop tuning and heavy metal. Standard Stealth is more versatile.
Beveled Apex — Patented
Stealth III Family
Precision, tight control, and fast picking. Redesigned concave grip with raised nodes. Glows in the dark.
Smaller · Thicker · More Control
Takes the Stealth and builds on it. Redesigned concave grip eliminates slippage. Darker tone ideal for heavier music. Compact size for sweeping and tremolo precision. Contains Strontium Aluminate — glows in the dark.
Grip 92Clarity 75Bottom 70Control 95Flex 15
III Grip & Thickness · Standard Size
The III in a medium format — same size as the original Stealth. Same thick body, raised-node grip, darker precise tone. For players who want III control but find the compact III too small.
Grip 92Clarity 75Bottom 70Control 93Flex 15
III Precision · Larger Format
The III but bigger. More surface area for larger hands or grip challenges. Same darker tone, same precision for sweeping and tremolo. Contains Strontium Aluminate.
Grip 95Clarity 74Bottom 70Control 92Flex 15
Stealth III vs Stealth III Medium
Identical performance. Only difference is size — III is compact (26×20mm), Medium is standard (29×24mm). Choose based on hand size preference.
Stealth III vs Stealth III XL
XL is for larger hands — same grip system, same tone. XL has slightly higher grip score (95 vs 92) due to more surface contact.
Stealth vs Stealth III
Different picks. Stealth is more balanced — brighter tone, more flexibility, better clarity. Stealth III is darker, more rigid, more precise, more grip. III is built for speed and control. Stealth is built for versatility.
Ridged Tip — Patented
Harmonic Family
Harmonic richness and tonal texture. Micro-ridges excite overtones on every string contact.
12-String Effect · Bright · Percussive
Creates a 12-string effect on any 6-string. Open chords become compressed while each note stays clear. Percussive, cuts through reverb, brightens bass. The entry point to the harmonic family.
Harm 85Bright 82Attack 68Compress 72Control 65
Maximum Harmonic Impact · Most Aggressive
Aggressive version of the Attak — same brightening but with more impact and stronger percussive sound. Powerful 12-string effect. Extremely compressed note picking. Slap-and-pop on bass.
Harm 90Bright 88Attack 85Compress 88Control 62
Devin Townsend Signature · Multiple Surfaces
Devin Townsend's signature — replicates serrated pick sound without wear-in. Multiple surfaces = multiple sounds in one pick. Richest harmonic complexity in the lineup. Two years in development.
Harm 98Bright 85Attack 55Compress 65Control 68
Attak vs Ambush
Same body, different ridge pattern. Ambush is more aggressive — higher harmonic impact (90 vs 85), more compression (88 vs 72), stronger attack (85 vs 68). Attak is more subtle and approachable. Ambush is for players who want maximum effect.
Attak vs Earthtone
Earthtone has the highest harmonic score in the entire lineup (98). Multiple surfaces give you multiple tones from one pick. Attak is simpler, cheaper, more focused. Earthtone is the Devin Townsend signature — studio-quality tone richness.
Ambush vs Earthtone
Ambush is more aggressive and compressed — better for blues, percussive playing. Earthtone is richer and more nuanced — better for prog, acoustic, studio work. Ambush attacks. Earthtone envelops.
Ridged Tip — Patented
Blade Family
Aggressive attack and defined note separation. Blade-tip design emphasizes upper mids and clarity.
Precision With an Edge · Upper Mids
Top end steps forward with upper mids. Lightens muddiness in the lows. Increased rigidity creates greater effect when playing harder. Sweep and tremolo friendly. Richer darker sound on acoustic strumming.
Bright 85Mids 88Clarity 82Control 80Flex 20
Smaller · More Flex · Brighter
Smaller, more flexible than Blade II. More top end, upper mids step forward. Lightens low-end muddiness. Brighter sound on acoustic strumming.
Bright 92Mids 88Clarity 85Control 68Flex 78
Blade II vs Blade III
Blade II is thicker and more rigid — better for heavy playing, drop tuning, more controlled. Blade III is thinner, more flexible, brighter — better for precision picking and acoustic. Same mid-forward character, different feel.
Ridged Tip — Patented
Surge Family
Grit, growl, and raw energy. Distortion-like effect with aggressive attack definition.
Grit · Distortion Effect · Growl
Adds grit and distortion-like effect. Greater attack immediacy. Cool top end without piercing. Tightens lows. Takes overdrive to another level — edgy growling bass tone.
Grit 88Attack 85TopEnd 80Clarity 75Flex 48
More Precision · Same Growl
Slightly thicker and smaller than Surge — more precision, same growl. Same attack immediacy, same cool top end. Tighter lows. Compact size for faster playing.
Grit 88Attack 88TopEnd 80Clarity 78Flex 44
Surge vs Surge II
Surge II is slightly smaller and tighter — higher attack score (88 vs 85), better clarity (78 vs 75). Surge standard is bigger and slightly more flexible. Both have the same grit character — choose by size preference.
Ridged Tip — Patented
Viper Family
Versatility across multiple styles. Triangular 3-tip design — three edges, three sounds.
3-Tip Triangle · All Styles
Three usable tips. Pinpoint tip = precision + darkness. Back-end tips = brightness + rigid small-pick feel. Great dynamic range for bass — less aggressive to super aggressive.
Versatile 88Precision 80Bright 78Bass 82Control 75
0.7mm · Smaller · More Flex
Smaller, thinner (0.7mm), more flexible than Viper. Same 3-tip system. Same dynamic range for bass. Compact feel for players who prefer smaller picks.
Versatile 88Precision 82Bright 80Bass 80Control 70
Viper vs Viper-Mini
Same 3-tip concept. Viper is larger and thicker (1.4mm) — more control, more bass response. Viper-Mini is smaller and thinner (0.7mm) — brighter, more flexible, more precise. Choose by hand size and flex preference.
Specialist
Specialist Models
Unique designs that don't fit neatly into one family — each built for a specific purpose.
Step-Down Tip · Transparent Compression
Step-down tip gives a big pick a medium gauge tone. Huge thumping power on bass. Warmer tone normally, adds bite when you dig in. Transparent compressor effect. 3mm concave grip for fluidity.
Bass 95Compress 90Warmth 88Dynamics 90Control 82
Stealth III Grip · 0.5mm Tip · Precision + Rhythm
Stealth III grip body + ultra-thin 0.5mm tip. Precision picking plus aggressive rhythm in one pick. Richer brighter sound on acoustic. For players who switch between lead and rhythm constantly.
Grip 90Bright 85Acoustic 88Versatile 92Flex 85
3-Tip System · Ambush + Surge + Viper Mini
Three picks in one. Standard tip = crisp tone. Ambush-like tip = fuller brighter sound. Surge-like tip = growl for chugging. Sunken logo grip. Glows. The ultimate versatility pick.
Versatile 98Crisp 80Harmonic 85Grit 82Control 75
Fusion vs Equilibrium
Both are versatility picks but totally different. Fusion is a hybrid body (III grip + thin tip) — best for players switching between lead and rhythm. Equilibrium is a multi-surface system (3 different tip types in one pick) — best for players who want different tones without switching picks.
Juggernaut vs everything else
Juggernaut is in a category of its own. Highest bass score in the lineup (95). If you play bass or heavy downtuned guitar, nothing else in the catalogue does what this does. The step-down tip gives natural compression that no other pick shape achieves.
Cross-System Comparisons
The questions players ask most — "What's the difference between X and Y?" when they're from different families.
Stealth III vs Blade II
Stealth III (Beveled Apex) is built for speed, control, and a darker tone — best for metal, fast picking. Blade II (Ridged Tip) is built for upper-mid presence and note definition — best for heavy rhythm, drop tuning. Stealth III grips better (92 vs 80 control). Blade II has more tonal character.
Stealth vs Surge
Stealth is clean, controlled, even-toned. Surge adds grit, growl, and distortion-like effect. Stealth for precision. Surge for energy. Two fundamentally different tonal philosophies from the same company.
Attak vs Surge
Both are Ridged Tip but totally different tone. Attak adds harmonic shimmer and 12-string-like compression — bright, percussive. Surge adds grit and growl — aggressive, distortion-like. Attak is for harmonic richness. Surge is for raw energy.
Stealth Flex vs Fusion
Both are flexible picks from the Beveled Apex system. Stealth Flex (1.3mm) is a thinner Stealth — simple, familiar shape. Fusion (0.5mm tip) has the Stealth III's redesigned grip body with an ultra-thin tip — more versatile, better for switching between lead and rhythm. Fusion has the better grip (90 vs 74).
Earthtone vs Equilibrium
Both are premium ($8.49-$8.99), both offer multiple sounds from one pick. Earthtone maximizes harmonic richness (98 — highest in the lineup). Equilibrium maximizes versatility (98 — also highest). Earthtone is Devin Townsend's signature for studio-quality tone. Equilibrium is for players who want Ambush + Surge + Viper tones in one pick.
Viper vs Equilibrium
Both are multi-tip picks. Viper is triangular with 3 identical tip shapes at different angles — same tone system, different attack angles. Equilibrium has 3 different tip systems — Ambush, Surge, and Viper Mini sounds from one pick. Viper is simpler. Equilibrium is more varied.
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