Hybrids

Srixon ZX MKII Hybrid

Srixon โ€” Srixon ZX MKII Hybrid ยท By Andy ยท Jan 26, 2026

OUR SCORE
7.9
Good
RATE THIS PRODUCT
Be the first to rate this product
Product
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2Thumbnail 3Thumbnail 4Thumbnail 5Thumbnail 6

A sleek, tour-inspired hybrid that rewards solid ball-strikers with accuracy and a penetrating flight -- now available at a compelling price.


The Big Picture

Srixon has never been a brand that shouts from the rooftops, but the ZX MKII Hybrid is exactly the kind of club that earns its reputation quietly through performance. Building on the foundation of the original ZX hybrid, the MKII generation introduces a refined Rebound Frame -- essentially a spring-within-a-spring construction where two distinct flex zones in the face and body work together to maximize energy transfer at impact. The result is improved ball speed across the hitting area without requiring a fundamental redesign.

The other headline change is a deeper, lower center of gravity achieved through a reshaped internal sole weight. Srixon repositioned mass further back and lower in the head to promote a higher launch angle, which is exactly what you want from a hybrid that needs to hold greens from 200 yards out. The club also earned a 2023 Golf Digest Hot List Gold Medal, which tracks with what I experienced during testing.

Available in four loft options -- 3+ (13.5 degrees), 3 (15 degrees), 5 (18 degrees), and 7 (21 degrees) -- the ZX MKII gives you genuine flexibility in building out the long end of your bag. The stock shaft is the HZRDUS RDX Smoke in a mid-launch, mid-spin profile, offered in flex options from A through X. Head sizes range from 143cc in the 7-hybrid up to 175cc in the 3-hybrid, which puts these firmly on the compact side of the hybrid market. This is a club designed with input from Srixon's tour staff, and it shows.


At Address

The ZX MKII Hybrid is one of the better-looking hybrids I have put behind a golf ball. The matte black crown is clean and uncluttered, with a subtle grey alignment feature near the leading edge that helps frame the ball without being visually distracting. The shape itself is sleek and compact -- a smaller footprint than most game-improvement hybrids, with a squared-off toe and a neutral face angle that sits beautifully square at address.

Srixon ZX MKII Hybrid Top-down address view of matte black hybrid crown with Srixon logo

This is not a hybrid that is trying to look like a fairway wood. The profile is more iron-like in its proportions, which will appeal to better players who want something that inspires precision rather than just confidence through sheer size. The crown is smooth and continuous, without the stepped crown design found on the ZX MKII fairway woods, which I think gives the hybrid a cleaner, more unified appearance. The head does look compact, and golfers who need maximum visual reassurance at address may find it a touch small. But for players who appreciate a tight, workmanlike shape, the ZX MKII delivers.


Sound & Feel

At impact, the ZX MKII produces a slightly tinny, metallic sound that is distinctly hybrid rather than trying to mimic a fairway wood or iron. It is not the quietest hybrid on the market, but it is by no means off-putting. There is a crispness to center strikes that tells you immediately when you have caught one flush, and the feedback on off-center hits is honest enough that you can diagnose your misses without needing a launch monitor.

The Rebound Frame construction contributes to a lively feel off the face. Well-struck shots have a satisfying snap to them -- the kind of impact sensation that makes you want to hit another one. Mishits retain a reasonable amount of that liveliness, though you will notice a slight drop-off in feel and feedback when you move away from center. Overall, the sensory package is solid. It will not win awards for buttery softness, but the responsiveness and honest feedback are exactly what a performance-oriented hybrid should provide.


Performance

Ball Speed & Distance

The Rebound Frame does its job. The dual flex zone construction generates competitive ball speed, and I was consistently carrying the 5-hybrid (18 degrees) around 195 to 200 yards with a mid-speed swing. That puts it right in the middle of the pack among current-generation hybrids -- not a distance leader, but absolutely respectable and plenty for most golfers looking to replace a 2- or 3-iron.

Srixon ZX MKII Hybrid Close-up of Srixon ZX MKII hybrid clubface with grooves

Where the distance story gets interesting is in the consistency. Shot-to-shot carry variation was impressively tight, typically within 4 to 5 yards, which speaks to how well the deeper CG and Rebound Frame maintain performance across the face. The lower, deeper center of gravity helps the ball get up quickly, and even shots struck slightly low on the face still managed to achieve playable trajectories. You are not going to lose 15 yards on a slightly thin strike the way you might with a long iron.

Launch & Spin

The ZX MKII launches high. Noticeably high. The repositioned CG does exactly what Srixon intended -- it promotes an elevated launch angle that helps the ball climb quickly and land steeply, which is ideal for holding greens on long approach shots. If you struggle to get hybrids airborne, this club will help.

Spin sits in the low-to-mid range depending on the shaft configuration. With the stock HZRDUS RDX Smoke in a 6.0 (stiff) flex, I saw a mid-trajectory flight with controlled spin that did not balloon in the wind. The lighter A-flex shaft at 50 grams produced a bit more spin and a higher peak, which is better suited for players with moderate to slower swing speeds who need every bit of carry they can get. The shaft options across the lineup -- from 50 grams in A-flex up to 60 grams in X-flex -- mean there is a configuration that works for a wide range of swing speeds.

Dispersion & Shot Shape

Accuracy is the ZX MKII's calling card. In independent testing pools, this hybrid ranked near the top for accuracy among 2023 hybrids, finishing 8th overall in that category. On the course, I found it to be a genuinely reliable club for hitting fairways off the tee on tight par 4s and finding greens from distance. The dispersion was tight, and the ball flight was predictable.

Srixon ZX MKII Hybrid Sole view showing ZX MKII branding, Rebound Frame, and 3-19 loft

There is a mild draw bias built into the design, which helps players who tend to lose shots to the right. It is not aggressive enough to cause problems for straight or draw-biased swings, but it does provide a subtle correction that keeps the ball from leaking right on less-than-perfect contact. For golfers who fight a slice, that draw tendency is a welcome feature. For low-handicappers who want to shape shots in both directions, the bias may occasionally make a controlled fade harder to produce.

One notable limitation: there is no hosel adjustability on the ZX MKII Hybrid. The loft and lie are fixed, so what you see is what you get. For golfers who like to tinker with their settings or who need a specific lie angle adjustment, this is a meaningful omission. It also means you need to be more deliberate about which loft you select, since you cannot dial it up or down a degree after purchase.

The forgiveness story is a bit mixed. On well-struck shots and slight misses, the ZX MKII performs admirably -- the deeper CG helps maintain launch on low-face strikes, and the compact head moves through rough cleanly. But on more significant mishits, the smaller head size does show its limits. This is not the most forgiving hybrid on the market, and golfers who make contact across a wide area of the face may find more consistency with a larger-headed option from Ping, Callaway, or Cobra.


Verdict

The Srixon ZX MKII Hybrid is a well-built, accurate club that rewards reasonably consistent ball-strikers with a penetrating, reliable flight. Its accuracy is genuinely impressive, the Rebound Frame technology delivers competitive ball speed, and the deeper center of gravity produces the high launch that makes hybrids so useful in the first place. The matte black aesthetics and compact shape give it a tour-level look that inspires confidence for players who prefer a smaller footprint.

The weaknesses are real but context-dependent. The lack of hosel adjustability is a miss in a market where most competitors offer it. Forgiveness, while adequate, falls short of the best game-improvement hybrids. And distance, though consistent, sits in the middle of the pack rather than at the front.

This hybrid is best suited for mid-handicappers and improving players who value accuracy and shot consistency over raw distance and maximum forgiveness. It also works well for lower-handicap golfers looking for a hybrid that does not feel oversized or unwieldy. With the price now reduced from its original $279.99 MSRP to $229.99 -- and available at some retailers for under $180 -- the value proposition is strong. It is a lot of performance for the money.