“The Nox AT10 Pro Cup Har-D by Agustín Tapia 2026 is a high-octane teardrop built around explosive smash power and aggressive baseline driving, reflecting Tapia's signature all-out attacking style.”
81/100
PRR Score
Teardrop
Shape
eva-foam
Core
Even
Balance
Performance
Every metric, scored out of 100.
Power
Very High80
Control
High74
Maneuverability
High72
Sweet Spot
Good69
Comfort
High70
Value
High78
PRR Score
81PRR Score
Inside the frame
What's inside
◉
Coreeva-foam
Foam core determines feel and vibration damping.
▽
ShapeTeardrop
Head shape affects sweet spot size and balance.
⊡
BalanceEven-balance
Balance point determines power vs. control trade-off.
◎
LevelAdvanced
Target player level for this racket.
Our verdict
The Nox AT10 Pro Cup Har-D by Agustín Tapia 2026 is a high-octane teardrop built around explosive smash power and aggressive baseline driving, reflecting Tapia's signature all-out attacking style. The hard EVA core delivers a firm, punchy feel that rewards clean ball-striking with serious pace and depth, but demands technical precision — off-centre hits will punish inconsistent players with vibration and loss of control. Advanced attackers who time the ball well and want a pro-level weapon to dominate with overhead finishing will find this racket deeply satisfying.
The AT10 Genius is NOX's marquee series — the racket line built around Agustín Tapia, and the second-largest family in our database. Unlike most flagship lines, the AT10 splits by construction rather than by year: the 18K editions are the stiffer, more precise frames Tapia plays, the 12K editions trade a little punch for comfort and forgiveness, and the Attack editions push balance higher for out-and-out aggression. Recent generations added Alum construction across the range. Whatever the variant, the AT10's hallmark is the same: a teardrop that behaves like a control racket until you accelerate it.
Which one should you buy?
The AT10 Genius 18K Alum is the pick if you want what the series is famous for — it scores 93 with us, the joint-best racket in our database. Intermediate players should look at the 12K editions first: most of the feel, noticeably easier on the arm and the wallet. The Attack editions only make sense if you already live at the net.