Full Metal Blitz Striker Beyblade

Authentic Takara Tomy Metal Beyblades | All Metal Collection

Meta description: Explore the ultimate collection of Takara Tomy metal Beyblades. Discover the durability and performance of a professional-grade Beyblade in metal.

There is a reason so many fans remember Metal Fight Beyblade differently. The sound was sharper. The clashes felt heavier. Even on screen, everything looked… solid. That is where the obsession with a true metal Beyblade comes from. Not plastic pretending to be strong. Actual weight. Actual impact. And a design philosophy that respected physics instead of gimmicks.

The Evolution of the Takara Tomy Beyblade

Before Beyblade became about bursts, locks, and launch tricks, it was about momentum.

The Takara Tomy Beyblade era defined that mindset. Early Plastic Gen tops experimented with form. Metal Fight refined it. Fusion wheels were no longer decorative. They carried real mass. Shape mattered. Balance mattered.

A standard Beyblade metal Takara Tomy release used metal where it counted and plastic where it made sense. Over time, fans started asking a simple question:

What happens if you push that idea further?

That question is exactly why interest in a full Beyblade in metal never really faded. It just waited for the tech, tooling, and safety standards to catch up.

Why Some Prefer All Metal Beyblades for Competition

Of course, custom Beyblades cannot be taken to tournaments—and that includes official and fan-hosted tournaments, such as WBBO ones. But enthusiasts who want more power and speed often battle it out with full-metal Beyblades if they have them. We have done that countless times with our own full-metal Beyblades. But why? Well, here, weight is not a flex. It’s leverage.

All metal Beyblades bring three advantages serious bladers care about:

  • Higher rotational stability
  • Stronger resistance to knockouts
  • More consistent contact during collisions

A heavier metal Beyblade does not magically win matches. Bad balance still loses. Poor launch angles still punish you. But when tuned properly, weight gives forgiveness. It lets good technique shine longer in a match.

That is why you will often see advanced players experimenting beyond stock Takara Tomy Beyblade builds—especially in controlled formats or during hobby battling, where durability and stamina matter more than flashy gimmicks.

This is also where modern full-metal interpretations enter the conversation. When done right, they amplify what Metal Fight designs already did well, without changing the soul of the Bey.

Comparing Different Metal Beyblade Weight Classes

Not all metal is equal, and heavier is not always better. Most metal Beyblade builds fall into rough weight classes:

  • Light-metal builds: Faster acceleration, sharper movement, higher recoil
  • Mid-weight builds: Balanced stamina and control, safest for mixed formats
  • Heavy all metal Beyblades: Maximum stability, slower movement, brutal defense

Stock Beyblade metal Takara Tomy tops usually sit in the middle. That was intentional. Too heavy, and the Bey becomes boring. Too light, and it gets bullied.

That balance is why collectors and battlers treat metal builds differently than regular releases.

Maintenance Tips for Your Metal Beyblade Collection

Metal demands respect. Treat it well, and it will outlast everything else in your collection. If you own a Beyblade in metal, keep these habits:

  • Wipe parts after battles to remove dust and grit
  • Store metal components dry to avoid oxidation
  • Avoid mixing extremely hard metals in casual battles
  • Check screws and threads regularly for wear

Unlike plastic, metal does not fail quietly. It tells you when something is off. Listen to it. Many collectors also rotate metal parts between battles instead of running the same setup endlessly. That spreads wear evenly and keeps performance consistent.

And yes, if you are curious—there are modern, battle-safe full-metal interpretations inspired by classic Takara Tomy Beyblade designs that stay compatible with original systems. They are not replacements. Think of them as an alternate experience for fans who always felt Beyblades were meant to be heavier.

Once you try one, it is hard to un-hear that sound in the stadium.

SpiralForge Staff
SpiralForge Staff
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