Yasaka Mark V vs Yinhe Moon Speed: Which Should You Buy?

UltraSpin comparison · 2026-06-10 · rubber

Yasaka Mark VYinhe Moon Speed
Our rating8.0/107.8/10
best_sidebothboth
control9.5medium-high
speed8.4high
spin8.5medium-high
sponge_hardnessmedium (around 43 degrees ESN)soft to medium (around 37 to 39 degrees; medium measures roughly 46 to 48 ESN, comparable to MX-P and M1)
typeinvertedinverted non-tacky tensor (factory tuned, God Crossbow / Max Tense sponge)
weight_uncut_g4762

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These rubbers suit different priorities. The Mark V is an inverted control sheet with class-leading placement, forgiving spin sensitivity and a long lifespan, but a flatter, lower-spin trajectory and modest speed. The Moon Speed is a factory-tuned non-tacky tensor with a fast, bouncy feel that rivals far pricier ESN rubbers, an audible glue effect and easy gears, excelling at blocking, counter-topspin, drives and close-to-table flicks.

Choose the Mark V if you want maximum control while building technique or value feel and consistency over raw pace on both wings. It needs a faster blade to finish and blocks softly.

Go with the Moon Speed if you are an improving offensive player who wants a fast, springy backhand tensor on a budget, especially anyone replacing or trading down from a Xiom Vega Pro and happy to drive through the ball close to the table. It has a low throw with a snappy top gear that leaves little margin for error, needs more effort to lift heavy backspin than tackier rubbers, can come in heavy sheets, and loses effectiveness on passive shots away from the table. It is offered in soft, medium and hard to match either wing. At a 7.8 rating it trades some forgiveness for speed, while the Mark V stays the steadier control choice.

FAQ

Which rubber is faster?

The Moon Speed. It is a fast, bouncy factory-tuned tensor that rivals pricier ESN rubbers, while the Mark V has lower outright speed and needs a faster blade to finish points.

Which is better for the backhand?

The Moon Speed is aimed at improving players who want a fast, springy backhand tensor close to the table. The Mark V works on both wings but is slower and flatter.

Is the Moon Speed forgiving?

Less so than the Mark V. Its low throw and snappy top gear leave little margin for error, whereas the Mark V is built around class-leading control and forgiveness.

Which handles heavy backspin better?

Neither is tacky, but the Moon Speed needs more effort than tackier rubbers to lift heavy backspin, and the Mark V also has a flat, low-spin response, so both reward good technique here.