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Mezz

Japanese precision. EC7, PowerBreak, Axi cues.

About Mezz

Mezz Cues is a Japanese brand from Tokyo — pioneer of United Joint technology and multi-layer Ignite shaft. Dominates in Asia and Europe, popular among top players like Ko Pin Yi, David Alcaide, Wu Kun Lin. Models EC7 (tournament), PowerBreak (break cue), Axi (mid-tier), Ignite (top low-deflection) — uncompromising build quality.

Featured models and products

  • Ignite shaft — multi-layer construction for carbon-level low deflection
  • United Joint — Mezz standard joint for all cues (universal shaft swap)
  • PowerBreak models — dedicated break cues (hard phenolic tip, heavier balance)
  • EC7 — tournament cue used by top players; Axi (~$650) is entry pro
  • Price: Sport (~$260), Axi ($650-900), EC7 ($1300-2100), Ignite ($2100+)

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FAQ — Mezz

Which Mezz for a beginner?
Mezz Sport 155/205 (~$260-400) — complete 2-piece cue with United Joint. Feel is close to EC7 (Mezz DNA) at much lower price. Alternative: Mezz Axi 155 (~$650) — if budget allows, you get a shaft comparable to tournament level. Do not start with PowerBreak (break cue) — that is a specialist tool.
How much does a Mezz cue cost?
Sport 155/205: $260-400. Axi (mid-pro): $650-900. EC7 (tournament): $1300-2100. Ignite (top): $2100-4000. PowerBreak (break cue): $650-1200. Custom models (Special Edition, Limited): $2500-6500. Used premium Mezz often sell at ~60% of retail.
Mezz EC7 vs Predator P3 — which is better?
Both are top-tier tournament cues. EC7 (Mezz) has heavier hit and stronger feedback, P3 (Predator) is lighter in hit and "soft". Deflection is comparable (both low-deflection). Choice comes down to feel — try both before buying if you can. Predator dominates the US, Mezz Asia and Europe.

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