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AdidasAdidas Metalbone 3.3 Ale Galán
ReviewedteardropBest Power Rackets

Adidas Metalbone 3.3 Ale Galán

The Metalbone 3.3 Ale Galán is a raw power weapon built around a stiff 3K carbon face and head-heavy teardrop balance that generates explosive pace on smashes and deep drives when contact is clean.

PRR Score86/100
Best price153
Facecarbon-3k
BalanceHead-heavy

10% discount auto-applied via PRR10.

Adidas Metalbone 3.3 Ale Galán padel racket — teardrop shape
Performance

Every metric, scored out of 100.

Power
Exceptional90
Control
High70
Maneuverability
Good66
Sweet Spot
Good62
Comfort
Good64
Value
High76
PRR Score
86PRR Score
The verdict

The Metalbone 3.3 Ale Galán is a raw power weapon built around a stiff 3K carbon face and head-heavy teardrop balance that generates explosive pace on smashes and deep drives when contact is clean. The trade-off is a demanding sweet spot and noticeable vibration transmission through the arm, making it best suited to technically consistent advanced players who can routinely find the centre of the face. Players who love an aggressive baseliner style and have already developed solid mechanics will get exceptional performance from this racket, but arm-sensitive or transitioning players should approach with caution.

What we loved
Exceptional raw power delivery from the head-heavy balance and carbon-3k surface
Solid comfort despite the aggressive spec, thanks to the EVA-foam core dampening
Professional-grade construction that rewards clean, technical swings with consistency
Worth knowing
Reduced maneuverability at the net—the head-heavy balance makes quick volley adjustments harder
Sweet spot is smaller than mid-weight alternatives; off-center hits lose effectiveness noticeably
Inside the frame

What's inside

Face weavecarbon-3k

Carbon fibre weave density of the hitting face.

CoreEVA

Foam core determines feel and vibration damping.

ShapeTeardrop · Head-heavy

Head shape affects sweet spot size and balance point.

SurfaceCarbon 3K

The texture and finish of the outer face.

Weight365g

Frame weight range in grams.

LevelAdvanced

Target player level for this racket.

Carbon grade
3K
6K
12K
18K
Around the network
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Price history
Price history
169.95current best
€169.95
Current
€169.95
Lowest
€183
Average
€189.95
Highest
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Best price
€153€170
at PadelProShop
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PadelProShopLowest pricePRR1010%
In stock
€153€170
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Full specification
AttackerStandard
ShapeTeardrop
Face weaveCarbon 3K
CoreEVA
BalanceHead-heavy
Weight365g
LevelAdvanced
Playing stylePower
The series story

Adidas Metalbone

Ale Galán's power weapon with adjustable weights

Few rackets in our database are as closely tied to a single player as the Metalbone is to Ale Galán. He has used it to finish points overhead at the highest level of the World Padel Tour, and the frame reflects his style exactly: diamond shape, aggressive balance, built for attacking players who want to load up genuine finishing pace from the back-court. What sets the Metalbone apart from every other power flagship we have tested is the adjustable weight system. Moving the weights changes how the frame swings and where the balance sits, letting you dial between faster handling at the net and heavier hitting from deeper positions. No other mainstream racket in our database offers that kind of tuning out of the box.

The family has grown into four distinct lines. The mainline Metalbone is the core offer. The HRD+ pushes stiffness and pace further, at the cost of some feel on touch shots. The Carbon softens the layup for players who want power without that unforgiving response. The Team sits at the entry point for improvers growing into the Metalbone silhouette. Across generations, the naming has shifted too: numbered versions (3.3 in 2024, 3.4 in 2025) gave way to a clean model-year format in 2026, which also brought the strongest scores we have ever recorded for the series.

The 3.3 HRD+ opened at PRR 88. The 3.4 generation pushed the HRD+ to 89, with the standard 3.4 matching the 3.3 at 88 but at a sharper price as stock cleared. The 2026 reset delivered the biggest step yet: the mainline Metalbone reaches PRR 90 and the HRD+ hits 91, the highest scores in the series by a clear margin. The Metalbone has never been for everyone. For advanced attacking players who are composed under pressure and trust their construction of points from the back, the numbers speak plainly.

Which one should you buy?

The 2026 Metalbone HRD+ at PRR 91 is the clearest expression of what this series does. If you are an advanced attacker who finishes overhead with confidence and handles a demanding frame without flinching, buy it at full price. The standard 2026 Metalbone at PRR 90 is marginally more forgiving through construction of points and a small step behind on raw pace. That one-point PRR gap is real, but both frames reward the same player profile. Neither belongs in the hands of someone still building their game. The 3.4 generation is worth serious attention wherever retailers are discounting to clear stock. The HRD+ 3.4 at PRR 89 sits genuinely close to the 2026 standard, and the regular 3.4 at PRR 88 is the best value entry point in the Metalbone family right now. The Carbon and Team editions are a different proposition entirely: they suit players moving into the Metalbone ecosystem who are not yet ready for a full diamond frame at maximum stiffness. They serve a real purpose for improvers finding their feet at the net and through the glass, but the aggressive attacker this flagship was built for will want one of the top three.

  1. 2024
    Metalbone 3.3

    The adjustable-weight formula matures: diamond shape, aggressive balance, and the HRD+ edition (PRR 88) for players who want maximum stiffness.

  2. 2025

    Refined layup and better comfort at the same power ceiling. The HRD+ 3.4 scores 89; the standard 3.4 (PRR 88) is the value pick of the generation.

  3. 2026

    Naming resets for 2026. The mainline jumps to PRR 90 and the HRD+ to 91 — the best-scoring Metalbones we have tested, including Galán's own edition.

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