[ HSPIN x At Design Lab ] Pyro OG New Original Color Release 04.17 10:00 PM EDT

Pyro OG

HSPIN x At Design Lab collaboration

New Original Color Release

04.18 11:00 AM JST | 04.17 10:00 PM EDT

The Dawn

Do you still remember the first metal yoyo you ever held?

The weight when you opened the box. The way you rolled it in your hand over and over before that first throw. The feeling of something entirely different in hands that had only ever known plastic. That was the moment a yoyo stopped being a toy.

In 2005, players around the world had that same experience. Only the impact was on a different scale entirely.

At the time, full-metal yoyos were still considered experimental. Metal-rim designs — plastic bodies with metal weight rings — ruled the competitive scene, and even among top players, the consensus was clear: full metal was too risky to compete with. Full metal was a dream. Not an option.

HSPIN changed that. From Switzerland. Quietly. Completely.

Innovation — Pyro Broke the Rules —

45mm wide. Over 70 grams. Clearly an outlier in an era of 40mm norms. But everyone who threw it understood immediately — this metal yoyo could compete. The wide catch zone grabbed the string. The weight kept it spinning. The stability held. Things players had written off as impossible on full metal became possible. And for the first time in yoyo history, flame engravings were lasered directly into the profile of the throw. The matte-anodized surface killed friction for grinds, and those engravings were part of the function. Beauty and playability didn’t just coexist — they were the same thing.

That’s why players who lived through that era remember the Pyro as the moment everything changed.

The Intersection — A Fork in the Timeline —

Do you know what happened to the Pyro after that?

HSPIN listened to the feedback. “Too heavy.” “Too wide.” And so came the Pyro Light — slimmer, lighter, optimized for competition. That was one right answer. The rest of the industry followed the same direction. More spin time, more maneuverability, more competitive viability. The yoyos of today are built on that accumulated optimization.

But what if, at that intersection, the Pyro’s raw character had been carried forward instead? What if that weight, that width — written off as flaws — had been treated as design philosophy, and a lineage had continued from there? What would exist today?

The fact that no answer to that question exists is something we’ve always found hard to accept.

So we decided to pursue it seriously.

HSPIN and At Design Lab converge across time. This project is not about commercial success through reissuing an archived product. It’s an attempt to open the door to the path not taken — and to write the future that choice leads to as new history. And at its core is a desire to pass that history and culture forward: from players who remember, to players who never had the chance to know.

The Blueprint — Faithful Reproduction and a Single Update —

The decision we made in approaching this reproduction is simple. Don’t change it.

HSPIN’s Chris and Had were fully involved in development. With Chris’s collaboration, we excavated the original 2005 drawings completely — body geometry, weight distribution, every detail of that original design, reproduced faithfully.

The one exception is the response system. The original pads no longer have compatible replacements available. So that one area was updated to modern spec, ensuring today’s players can throw this daily for ten, twenty years without worry. The feel, the character, the weight of that era — untouched. The change was the minimum necessary.

You’ve seen this before: a reissue that claims to follow the original drawings, but feels like something’s off. We chose a manufacturer with deep familiarity with those drawings specifically to avoid that. The goal is simple: someone who knows the Pyro should receive it as a Pyro. Nothing more. Nothing less.

Origin — Hold the Beginning —

This is not a reissue.

This is chapter one of another history. The road not taken at the 2005 intersection starts here. No one knows yet what comes next. But one thing is certain: without this first throw existing, none of what follows can exist either.

To those who know the Pyro — that feeling is here. To those who don’t — your hands are about to learn why players who lived through that era still say its name.


One last thing.

Happy 20th anniversary, Pyro. Thank you for everything.

It would mean the world to share this moment with this community.

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Always wanted to play Pyro. I didn’t realize the OG design was so heavy. Excited :fire::fire::fire:

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Oooo tempting. Almost afraid to buy one, as I’m sure that’d be the first step in a long, long retroactive search. Similar to handquakes, I’m sure I’d be struck with the urge to track down all possibly runs/ways/editions. :joy:

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Ooh, that’s nice!
I hope it will available at YYE.

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Do the envy next :blush::blush:

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I need to find my Pyro X…that was a fun throw (and no string-eating). Also anxiously waiting for my Handquake 2 to arrive from Switzerland :slight_smile:

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I don’t remember the og pyro being that heavy but then again I was throwing 80g or heavier yo-yos in 2005, and I haven’t used mine in years since it’s currently resting in peace in a sad dif pad related death.:smiling_face_with_tear: but the pyro reborn looks sick​:oncoming_fist:

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Difpad related death?

As in, there are no modern replacements for the difpad and that keeps you from throwing?

And I’m newly in love with heavy, long spinning yos. I would love to know the models you’re talking about. I knew the revG and franks throws were heavy, but didn’t know it was a trend back then.

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I wish At Design Labs could post up another three or 400 pics of that red Pyro.

I looked at the 2 or 3 dozen images they put up, but I think I need more detail.

:joy::clown_face::joy:………..

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Hmmm

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I før ØN€ am VERY excited for this release!

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The dif pad death would be related to no modern replacements. The rev g felt like it came out a lifetime before the pyro. The rev g was late 90s, I believe even before the 1st handquake. But to answer your question, I was throwing buzzon bushidos back.

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There are still dif pads in stock at a couple old stores - plus lots of people use the new thing Duncan silicone stickers

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You can send me a dm, I still have some unused dif pads but they have hardened over the years. I don’t know the state of my silicone friction stickers collection or if I have size C stickers. I’ll look into it and dig out a pyro or 2.:oncoming_fist:

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Obviously, you did a most excellent job on the New Pyro.

Great decision to upgrade the response system.

My one curiosity is in the quote above about how you basically duplicated the specs of the original. But in the next paragraph, where you mention the updated response pads, you didn’t mention that the gap on the New release is visibly Wider than the OG.

I think that was a great move also.

Can you provide the original gap width and the New gap width?

So many yo-yos trending lately, have been/are, Wiiider, and more V or H shapes, and bi metal, tri metal, POM and POM hybrids, Titanium’s and stainless steels and magnesium’s and whatever….. it will be most interesting to hear how well the more advanced players can adjust their movements to accommodate a yo-yo shape very unlike the majority of yo-yos they currently throw?

I think that is a very good thing. Sorta like Nostalgia and the present at the same time.

Since I was obviously ‘around’ when the Original Pyro was released, I immediately felt it was ahead of its time. And it ‘was’. People either really liked it.. or just didn’t know what to do with it?

But, I seldom ever heard anybody say anything bad about the Pyro. To me, it was one of the very first Custom from the Factory yo-yos. I actually would talk to people that loved the looks of the Pyro so much, they were afraid to play with it. They didn’t want to take a chance bouncing them off the ground. And they would just display them, lol.

.. Maybe somebody can set up an Internet Pyro challenge, once enough are sold and in the hands of players. They could call it ‘Challenge the Fire’ Contest. 60 second Freestyle. Best video wins a Pyro. I will pay for the Pyro given as the prize.

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I can’t tell you gap width but you can play by original gap with HSPIN Slim.
Of course, Original Pyro used HSPIN size and narrower gap.
Pyro OG isn’t 100% same but you can enjoy both nostalgic narrow gap and contempolaly playability.

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I understand not knowing the gap width of the original. I don’t understand in the next sentence that you can play the original gap width the slim bearing. Both statements can’t be true. You currently have the cad for the new pyro and you have dimensions of the hspin slim bearing. So you know the gap width of it with the slim bearing and obviously with the large bearing. In some of the previous posts here or on instagram you’ve mentioned you have the cad files from the original pyro, so you should be able to calculate the gap width. Basically, you should have access to all of the information, to make statement 1 false and statement 2 true.

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This is exciting!
I had the original Pyro when it first came out and I loved it.
Sadly I traded it away, however I’m super excited for this reissue!

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Ordered mine!

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