Head Gravity Tour · 2025 Series Analysis

Head Gravity Tour Review

The biggest overhaul in the Gravity line's history. An in-depth breakdown of the new 98 sq in, 16x19 Gravity Tour — the frame that rivals the Wilson Blade 98.

Executive Summary

The Head Gravity Tour 2025 is the most significant model change in the Gravity line's history. Previous generations were 100 sq in with an 18x20 pattern. This update shrinks to 98 sq in with a 16x19 pattern — a completely different racquet that combines the Gravity's signature buttery feel with spin-friendly precision.

Key Characteristic: The teardrop (Sweet Zone) head shape is the Gravity's defining feature. It moves the widest part of the string bed to the upper hoop, creating a larger, more forgiving contact zone in the area where modern players most often strike the ball. The result is a 98 that feels more forgiving than its head size suggests.

Key Update (2025): Auxetic 2.0 now extends into the handle alongside the yoke, alongside a lower RA than the previous generation. The frame is notably softer and more organic-feeling than Gravity racquets of recent years, with reviewers consistently praising the pure, connected response as one of the best in the Head lineup.

Performance Profile

The Gravity Tour 2025 occupies a unique position — a control-oriented 98 with a spin-friendly open pattern and one of the lowest RA ratings in its class. Understanding how it compares to the Gravity Pro and Gravity MP is essential.

Performance Comparison: Gravity Tour vs Gravity Pro

Gravity Tour leads in spin and feel · Gravity Pro leads in control and stability

Gravity Tour (98 · 16×19)
Gravity Pro (100 · 18×20)

Model Comparison Guide

The 2025 Gravity family spans three distinct philosophies. The Tour is the newcomer that fills the gap between the all-court Pro and the accessible MP.

Gravity Tour (New)

98 sq in · 16x19 · 305g
For: Advanced / 4.5+ Spin Players

The new precision-spin option. A 98 sq in head with an open pattern for players who want the Gravity's feel but with a more aggressive topspin game. The teardrop shape provides a larger effective sweet spot than a traditional 98.

Gravity Pro

100 sq in · 18x20 · 315g
For: Elite / Precision Strikers

The tour-endorsed classic. Combines the larger head for forgiveness with a dense pattern for flat precision. Endorsed by Zverev and Rublev in heavily customized form. More power and forgiveness than the Tour.

Gravity MP

100 sq in · 16x20 · 295g
For: Intermediate / 3.5–4.5

The most accessible Gravity. Lightest weight, teardrop head, and a 16x20 pattern that blends spin access with some directional control. Excellent for players entering the Gravity line.

Who Plays With This?

The Gravity Tour 2025 debuted at the Australian Open. Its teardrop shape and open pattern suit heavy topspin baseliners who also demand exceptional feel. Tour frames are customized — treat these profiles as style guides, not spec guarantees.

Alexander Zverev
Gravity Tour / Pro (custom)
Topspin Baseliner

Zverev debuted the 2025 Gravity family at the Australian Open. His powerful, looping forehand and kick serve benefit from the open pattern's spin access, while the teardrop shape and soft feel give him the touch needed for his underrated drop shot game.

Andrey Rublev
Gravity Pro (custom)
Flat Aggressor

Rublev's relentless ball-striking style benefits from the Gravity's unique feel profile. The teardrop head keeps the sweet zone active even when he's driving flat through contact at pace, reducing errors on heavy-hit groundstrokes.

Roman Safiullin
Gravity Pro
All-Court Power

Safiullin's big-hitting, all-court game suits the Gravity Pro's combination of mass-based power and feel. The buttery response helps him execute his variety game while still delivering the heavy ball his style demands.

Taylor Fritz
Gravity-adjacent (custom)
Serve & Baseline

Fritz's powerful, serve-led game benefits from the Gravity's exceptional serve potential. The soft frame lets him swing freely with minimal arm fatigue, while the teardrop shape delivers the pace and kick he needs on first serves.

Technical Must-Knows

A Completely New Frame (Not an Update) The 2025 Gravity Tour is not an evolution of the previous Tour — it's an entirely new racquet. Previous generations were 100 sq in / 18x20. This version shares the Gravity name and feel identity, but has fundamentally different dimensions suited to a different player profile.
Teardrop (Sweet Zone) Head Shape Head's proprietary geometry that places the widest part of the string bed near the tip rather than the middle of the hoop. This creates a larger, more responsive contact zone in the upper hoop where modern players most frequently make contact, effectively making the 98 sq in head feel more forgiving than its area suggests.
Very Low RA (~59) The Gravity Tour has one of the lowest stiffness ratings on the market. This creates exceptional dwell time and a unique "pocketing" sensation that reviewers describe as organic and connected. But note: the high swingweight (~328) creates mass-based power and stability, compensating for what the low RA cannot provide alone.
Flex Concentrated in the Throat The frame's flex is predominantly in the throat section rather than the hoop, which softens impact and boosts control without making the hoop feel dead or unresponsive. This is why the Tour doesn't play as soft as its RA number implies.
Higher Launch Angle The 16x19 open pattern produces a notably higher launch angle than competitors like the Wilson Blade 98 18x20. On topspin groundstrokes this is an asset — the ball clears the net with margin and dips. On flatter shots it requires adjustment. Block returns need more intent than with closed-pattern frames.

String Setup Guide

The Gravity Tour's low RA and open 16x19 pattern make it very tunable — but the low power level means most players should start at lower tensions than they might expect. Reference range: 48–57 lbs (21.8–26 kg).

Quick Start (Most Players)

  • Start point (soft poly, 1.25mm, full bed): 50–53 lbs (22.5–24 kg). The low RA means the frame already provides feel — don't fight it with high tension.
  • If the ball is sitting short: The Gravity Tour has a low power level by design. Before adding tension, try a more powerful string or drop 2 lbs — additional tension will only amplify the control without adding the depth you need.
  • If balls are flying long: The 16x19 has a high launch angle. A shaped poly can help tame it with more spin and a dipping arc, without needing to raise tension significantly.
  • If you want more feel: Drop 2–3 lbs and try a natural gut or multifilament main with a soft poly cross. The low RA frame will amplify the gut's warmth beautifully.

Pro Reference

Alexander Zverev (Reported)

Gravity Tour/Pro (custom) · Full Poly / Hybrid
Tour Reference

Setup idea: Head Lynx Tour or similar soft poly, reportedly mid-50s lbs. Heavy customization on tour frames — Zverev's actual racquet is significantly heavier than retail spec.

Tour setups vary by surface, tournament, and personal preference. Use as a directional reference only.

Recommended Setups by Goal

Goal Recommended Setup Starting Tension What You'll Feel
BalancedSoft poly (full bed), 1.25mm50–53 lbs (22.5–24 kg)Connected, controlled — the frame's natural sweet spot
More spin / depthShaped poly mains (1.25mm), soft poly or multi crosses48–52 lbs (21.8–23.5 kg)Heavy topspin loop, ball dips into court — great for open-court angles
Max feelNatural gut mains + soft poly crossesGut mains 52–55 lbs, poly crosses 48–51 lbsExceptional warmth, maximum dwell time — best feel setup for this frame
More controlFirmer poly or 1.30mm, full bed52–55 lbs (23.5–25 kg)Lower launch, more direct feel — for players who flatten the ball
More comfortHybrid: poly mains + multifilament crossesPoly mains 48–51 lbs (21.8–23 kg)Softer impact, extended dwell time — already a comfortable frame

Maintenance Rule

The low RA amplifies dead string feel more than stiffer frames. When a poly goes dead in the Gravity Tour, the already-soft frame becomes overly muted and loses its key trait — ball connection. Restring at the first sign of reduced response, not when the string breaks.

Top 3 Recommended Strings

These strings consistently deliver excellent results in the Gravity Tour 2025, chosen to complement its low RA, open pattern, and exceptional feel-first identity.

Soft Control Poly

Head Lynx Tour

1.25mm
50–53 lbs / 22.5–24 kg

Best for: Players wanting a comfortable, well-rounded poly that matches the Gravity's feel-first character.

Head's own pairing — Lynx Tour is consistently used in Gravity demo setups for good reason. Its co-poly composition is soft, maintains tension well, and doesn't create stiffness on top of the already-soft frame. Excellent all-round performance without introducing harsh feedback.

Spin Poly

Solinco Hyper-G (Round)

1.25mm
50–53 lbs / 22.5–24 kg

Best for: Modern baseliners wanting to maximize the 16x19 pattern's spin output.

The round variant (vs square) delivers spin through snapback rather than bite, which suits the Gravity's dwell-time-first design. Reported as a preferred community setup in the 2025 Gravity Tour — the combination delivers heavy, looping topspin with a plush feel on contact.

Tour Hybrid

Natural Gut (Mains) + Soft Poly (Crosses)

1.25mm
Gut mains 52–55 lbs, poly crosses 49–52 lbs

Best for: Players who want to unlock the Gravity Tour's maximum feel potential.

Few frames respond to natural gut as beautifully as a low-RA, flexible player's frame. In the Gravity Tour, gut mains create extraordinary dwell time and warmth — the frame's low stiffness amplifies gut's elasticity rather than masking it. A soft poly cross (Lynx Touch, Poly Tour Pro) adds durability without killing the feel. An exceptional setup for advanced players.

Pro tip: The Gravity Tour is one of the rare modern frames that truly rewards natural gut. If you've never tried gut and you're playing this frame, it's worth investing in one hybrid restring to experience what the frame can do at its ceiling.

Full Specifications

Specification Gravity Tour (2025) Gravity Pro (2025) Gravity MP (2025)
Head Size98 sq in (632 cm²)100 sq in (645 cm²)100 sq in (645 cm²)
Weight (Unstrung)305g / 10.8oz315g / 11.1oz295g / 10.4oz
Weight (Strung)320g / 11.3oz~330g~311g
Length27 in27 in27 in
Balance320mm / 7 pts HL (unstrung)~315mm / 8–9 pts HL~325mm / 6–7 pts HL
String Pattern16x19 (open, spin-friendly)18x20 (dense, precise)16x20 (semi-open)
Beam Width22mm (constant / box)22mm (constant / box)22mm (constant / box)
Stiffness (RA)~59 (very flexible)~59~57–58
Swingweight~328~329~315–320
TechnologyAuxetic 2.0 / Graphene Inside / Sweet ZoneAuxetic 2.0 / Graphene Inside / Sweet ZoneAuxetic 2.0 / Graphene Inside / CAP grommet
Recommended Tension48–57 lbs48–57 lbs48–57 lbs