Axiom PRO G10
The Axiom, dressed in G10.
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“The weight is the first thing I noticed. The design is mesmerizing. No target is safe now.”
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G10 Down to the Clips
Get ready to stare.
The one people ask about.

The Middleweight
The just-right Axiom.
A showpiece you'll actually shoot.

Fair Warning
It's habit-forming.
You'll see.
Real shooters. Real reviews.
About the Axiom PRO G10
Two seconds in hand and you get it. The Axiom PRO G10 is built entirely of G10, a tough composite, right down to the clips, and the fit and finish are what premium actually looks like.
Underneath the looks it's every bit an Axiom: the same balanced, golden-ratio shape shooters refuse to give up. Band swaps take one tool and a few seconds with the included hex key. It's made in China to SimpleShot's quality-control specs.
Part of our PRO Series, the frames that get looked at almost as much as they get shot.
G10 is tough. Steel is tougher. A fork hit with steel leaves a mark in this frame that never comes out. So learn on the clay bandset and clay ammo packed in the box, and when you're dialing in a new grip, put Rubber Training Ammo downrange instead. Steel comes out once a fork hit is off the table.
And if you're just starting out, the standard Axiom shoots the same and asks a lot less of you. Come back for the G10 once your release is honest.
What's Included
- Axiom PRO G10 Slingshot
- Clay Ammo Sample
- Clay Ammo Bandset
- Steel Ammo Sample
- Steel Ammo Bandset
- Paracord Lanyard
- Pro Series Dog Tag
- FREE Fiber Optic Material
- FREE Hex Tool for Band Attachment
- FREE Neoprene Carry Pouch
Why Choose the Axiom PRO G10
Beauty that goes all the way through. The pattern isn't a coating; it's the material, top to bottom.
The sweet-spot weight. Enough mass to settle your aim, light enough to shoot for hours.
Band up and go. The hex tool rides on the lanyard, and the sight's already waiting when you draw.
Want a different premium look? The Axiom PRO brings solid-aluminum heft, and the Axiom Carbon Fiber is the light one.
Measurements
| Spec | Metric | Standard |
|---|---|---|
| Weight | 105 g | 3.7 oz |
| Overall Length | 133 mm | 5.24 in |
| Overall Width | 90 mm | 3.54 in |
| Fork Gap | 42 mm | 1.65 in |
| Fork Width | 24 mm | 0.94 in |
| Handle Thickness | 20 mm | 0.79 in |
Tech Specs
- Material
- G10 composite with brass accents
- Attachment
- Integrated Clips (OTT)
- Sights
- Fiber-optic reference
- Series
- PRO
Axiom PRO G10 FAQs
Is shooting a slingshot hard to learn?
No — most people land their first clean shots the same afternoon they pick up a slingshot. The basics come together fast: seven things to know, and our How to Shoot a Slingshot video walks you through all of them in under seven minutes. Eye dominance. Grip. Anchor point. Release. Sight down the bands.
What takes a little longer is consistency — putting your shot exactly where you intended, ten times in a row. Most folks see real groupings within a few hundred shots, which fits into a weekend.
A slingshot is a simple machine. Two hands. Bands doing the work. The shot goes wherever the bands are pointing. If you can swing a hammer or cast a fishing line, you can shoot a slingshot.
Watch the full explanation
Is this a real tool, or just a kid's toy?
A real tool. We build slingshots to be shot hard, by adults, for years.
They're a blast for kids too, sure. But make no mistake: a slingshot launches real ammo at real speed, and ours are designed, tested, and shipped to hold up to serious, everyday use. Many of our frames carry built-in fiber-optic sights. People hunt with them, compete with them, and put thousands of shots through them.
If the only slingshot you've known is the drugstore wrist-rocket, this is a different animal. Pick one up. You'll feel it on the first shot.
How safe is shooting a slingshot?
Safe — when you follow three rules:
- Wear safety glasses. Every shot. No exceptions.
- Use your lanyard. Every shot. No exceptions.
- Use a backstop and know what's behind it. A catchbox, tarp, plywood — anything that catches the ammo and protects what's beyond.
That's it. Slingshots aren't dangerous if you treat them like real tools. They are tools — they accelerate a projectile to real velocity. Same respect you'd give any tool that moves something fast.
It's up to you to know your local rules. Check before you shoot.
Safety glasses. Lanyard. Backstop. Three rules. Now shoot.
Where can I shoot a slingshot?
Almost anywhere with a proper backstop. A slingshot doesn't need a range. You need about 10 feet of distance, a backstop that catches the ammo, and clear awareness of what's beyond.
Common spots that work:
- Backyard. Most common. A catchbox or backstop against a fence, garage, or wall takes care of stray shots.
- Basement or garage. Surprisingly good — controlled lighting, no wind, no weather. Many shooters do most of their practice indoors with a proper catchbox.
Tournament distance is 30 to 33 feet (10 meters). When you're starting out, 10 to 15 feet is more than enough — close shots build confidence, and your backstop catches everything. As long as you can see what's downrange, you're good.
It's up to you to know your local rules. Check before you shoot.
You're not loud. You don't need permits in most places. You can shoot ten minutes on your lunch break or two hours after work. It's one of the only shooting sports that fits into modern life.
What ammo should I start with?
Start with clay or rubber ammo. Both are forgiving — soft enough that they don't damage backstops, won't ricochet hard if they hit something they shouldn't, and easy to clean up. Clay's biodegradable, so you don't have to chase every shot. Rubber's reusable, which makes it the cheapest practice ammo there is.
Once you're shooting confidently and your backstop is dialed in, step up to steel. Steel is what we recommend for everyday shooting — accurate, consistent, matched to most of our bandsets. For new shooters with starter bands, 3/8 inch steel is the most common starting size.
We don't sell lead and don't recommend it. Steel does everything most shooters need — including hunting, when paired correctly with bands.
Match your ammo to your bands. Heavier bands need heavier ammo. Mismatched bands and ammo cause hand slap and inconsistent shots.
Watch the full explanation
How soon will I actually get it?
Fast, and you'll see exactly how fast before you pay. Delivery time depends on where you live, so the simplest way to know is to add what you want to your cart and start checkout to the point where shipping shows. You'll see the methods and timing for your address right there, no guessing.
We ship quickly, and USA orders over $49 ship free.
Can I return it if it's not right?
Yes. You have 30 days from the day your order arrives.
If something isn't right, return it in new condition with its original packaging and we'll refund you. Start with our return request form and we'll walk you through the rest.
The full details live in our refund policy. The short version: if it's wrong, we'll make it right.
Can I trust this company?
Since 2012, SimpleShot has been the USA owned and operated home of everything slingshots — with thousands of reviews from shooters who started right where you are. We're not a faceless drop-shipper. We're shooters who answer our own emails, make our own videos, and shoot the same gear we sell. Want the whole picture? Read our story.
If we get something wrong, tell us and we'll set it straight. Order with confidence.
Will I pick the right slingshot for me?
We'll help you get it right. Most of what separates one frame from another is preference, not better-or-worse: grip shape, size in the hand, the way it carries. There's rarely a wrong answer, just the one that fits you.
Not sure where to start? Take our quiz and we'll point you to the frame that suits your hand size, your shooting, and how you like to carry. Want a closer look first? Every product page spells out who that frame is built for. Still torn? Reach out. We'd rather help you land on the right one than sell you the wrong one.
Pick the one that feels right. You can always add another down the road. Most of us did.
Is the power right for me, not too weak, not too much?
You're in control of that, and it's an easy call to get right.
Power comes from the bands, not the frame. We make bands in a full range, light to heavy, and the right starting point for most shooters is a moderate set matched to common steel ammo. Light bands for easy, comfortable plinking. Heavier bands when you want more speed and impact, including hunting. Swap the bandset and you change the whole character of your slingshot in seconds.
Start in the middle, get comfortable, then dial up or down. There's no single "right" power, just the right power for what you're doing today.
Am I getting everything I need to shoot on day one?
Every slingshot ships ready to shoot, with a starter set of bands and instructions in the box. Add ammo and something to catch it, and you're shooting the day it lands.
Rather get it all at once? Our Starter Kits pair the slingshot with matched bands, ammo, and the essentials, so there's nothing left to figure out. Either way, you won't be hunting for a missing part to get going. Open the box, set up a backstop, take your first shot.
Will I have to keep buying bands forever?
Bands are a consumable, like strings on a guitar, and the good news is they're cheap and they last.
A set lasts a good long while with normal shooting, and replacements are inexpensive. Buy them ready-made, or make your own from our latex and tapers for even less. Either way, the cost of staying in the game is small.
Here's the upside most people don't expect: changing bands is part of the fun. A faster set, a more powerful set, a fresh set tuned to a new ammo size. Bands aren't a tax on shooting. They're how you make the slingshot yours.












