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If you are new to pickleball but already suspect you will fall hard for it, the starter-set paddle in your trunk is borrowed time. Here is how to pick a first paddle you can actually grow into — from a true 2.5 through a competitive 4.0 — without wasting money on a stepping-stone purchase.

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A portable pickleball net is the difference between playing whenever you want and waiting for court time. This guide covers regulation dimensions, post stability, wind resistance, setup time, and how to choose a net that survives a backyard, a driveway, or the trunk of a car.

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Regular sunglasses fail at outdoor pickleball — they slide off on splits, dim the ball at the wrong moment, and shatter on impact. Here is what a sport-specific lens actually does, why polarization is a trade-off rather than an upgrade, and how to choose frames that stay on your face through a full session.

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Most serious pickleball players do not wear gloves, and there are good reasons for that. But for sweaty palms, recurring blisters, cold-weather play, and certain skin conditions, a glove can be the difference between a comfortable session and a ruined one. Here is when to wear one — and when to skip it.

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The gap between a hand-built pickleball paddle and a mass-produced one is not only price — it is tolerance, consistency, and the degree of human judgment applied at each stage of assembly. Understanding what that difference actually involves helps clarify why some paddles cost what they do.

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Running shoes are engineered for forward motion. Pickleball is not a forward-motion sport. Understanding the mechanical difference between court shoes and running shoes is the clearest upgrade most recreational players have not yet made — and one of the more consequential ones for long-term joint health.

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A premium paddle is a precision instrument, and the conditions it lives in between sessions matter as much as how it is played. Temperature swings, moisture, improper storage, and neglected surfaces all degrade performance in ways that are gradual — and largely preventable. This guide covers the practical habits that protect a serious investment.

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Not all paddles feel the same at contact — and that difference is not incidental. Core material, cell geometry, foam injection, and edge construction all shape how vibration travels through a paddle and into your hand. This article explains the mechanics behind paddle feel and why it matters across long sessions.

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The sub-$200 paddle segment has matured considerably. T700 raw carbon fiber, engineered polypropylene cores, and USAPA-approved construction are now accessible at this price — but not all executions are equal. Here is what the specification actually means, and what separates a true premium paddle from a premium-priced one.

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Paddle weight shapes every element of your game — from hand speed at the kitchen to drive power from the baseline. This guide breaks down the three weight ranges, the real trade-offs between them, and how to match a paddle's weight to the way you actually play.

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Buying matched pickleball paddles for two players sounds simple — until you factor in grip size, weight preferences, and whether a paddle set actually serves both players well. This guide covers every decision couples face before committing to a pair.

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ARTI makes two bags in two colorways — and each one has a distinct purpose. The tote is built for the player who moves through the world with intention. The duffle is built for the player who travels to compete. Here is how to choose.

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