The Siux Pegasus Revolution 2 is Siux’s versatile all-rounder — a hybrid-shaped frame with premium 24K carbon faces and a medium balance, built for players who want power and control in one racket.
The Pegasus is Siux’s do-everything line, and the Revolution 2 is its polyvalent hybrid. A medium balance keeps it manoeuvrable, while 24K X-Carbon faces over a hard EVA core deliver a medium-hard feel that blends attack and control. Shockout dampeners and the Dual Pro Grip round out a comfortable, well-equipped package.
This review covers its build, specs and on-court feel, and who it’s for. See also our best Siux padel rackets guide, or browse all our padel gear reviews.
Siux Pegasus Revolution 2 at a glance

Why it wins: A hybrid that blends power and control — the most versatile frame in the range and the pick for all-court players. (~$190)
- Hybrid — balanced feel
- Power without the punishment
- Mid balance, manageable
- Great for all-court play
Main features of the Siux Pegasus Revolution 2
The Pegasus Revolution 2 pairs an all-round shape with premium materials:
- Hybrid shape with a medium balance for versatility
- 24K X-Carbon faces for a responsive, medium-hard feel
- Hard EVA core balancing power and control
- 12K tubular frame for strength and durability
- Shockout dampeners + Dual Pro Grip for comfort
Specification of the Siux Pegasus Revolution 2
Here are the full specs of the Siux Pegasus Revolution 2:
- Shape: Hybrid
- Weight: ~355–375 g
- Balance: Medium
- Core: EVA Hard
- Faces: 24K Carbon
- Player level: Intermediate–Advanced
- Type of play: All-round
- Pro: —
Our review of the Siux Pegasus Revolution 2
The Pegasus Revolution 2 is the Siux most players will get on with. The hybrid shape and medium balance make it quick and easy to handle, while the premium 24K carbon faces give a responsive, medium-hard strike with genuine pop on the attack. It is a true all-rounder — enough power to finish, enough control to defend.
The hard EVA core keeps it lively rather than soft, so it still rewards clean contact, but the Shockout dampeners take the edge off vibration for a comfortable feel. For an improving-to-advanced player who wants one versatile racket, it is a smart pick.
Pros
- Versatile, all-court performance
- Premium 24K carbon faces
- Manoeuvrable medium balance
- Comfortable, with vibration damping
Cons
- Hard core asks for clean contact
- Jack-of-all-trades, not a specialist
- Premium price for the brand
Who is the Siux Pegasus Revolution 2 for?
The Pegasus Revolution 2 is for intermediate-to-advanced players who want one versatile racket that does everything well. Pure attackers may prefer the diamond Fenix Elite 5; control players the Electra Elite.
How the Siux Pegasus Revolution 2 plays
On all-court play it shines — quick at the net, enough pop on the attack, dependable on defence.
On smashes the 24K faces give a solid, responsive hit, though a diamond will hit harder.
Siux Pegasus Revolution 2 vs the alternatives
It sits between the pure-power Fenix Elite 5 and the control-leaning Electra Elite in Siux’s range. As a versatile hybrid it competes with all-round frames like the Babolat Air Veron — here with a premium 24K carbon face.
Is the Siux Pegasus Revolution 2 worth it?
For an all-court player who wants premium 24K carbon and genuine versatility, the Pegasus Revolution 2 is good value — you get a responsive, comfortable, do-everything racket. Specialists chasing pure power or pure control should look to the Fenix or Electra.
Conclusion
The Siux Pegasus Revolution 2 is a versatile, well-equipped all-rounder — the hybrid shape and medium balance keep it manoeuvrable, while premium 24K carbon faces give it a responsive, medium-hard strike with real pop. The hard core asks for clean contact, but with Shockout damping it stays comfortable. A strong one-racket-does-it-all pick.
A versatile, premium all-rounder. See where it fits in our intermediate padel rackets guide and the full best padel rackets roundup.

Lucas Sánchez is the founder of SimplePadel. Born and raised in Spain, Lucas has been living in the US and UK for the last 20 years and currently calls Miami his home. While he’s never played professionally, the dream is still alive.
Lucas loves nothing more than playing (and talking) about padel, and he considers himself lucky to have a wife and family that share his love for the game.