
Babolat Xplore Review – Babolat Xplore positions itself as a comfort-first multifilament, but the data shows something more interesting. This isn’t just a soft, beginner-friendly string. It’s a controlled, low-powered multi with elite tension holding and high comfort, designed for players who want consistency and predictability over raw performance.
Where traditional multis like Xcel focus on power and softness, Xplore tightens the response and sacrifices some explosiveness for control and stability. This is a modern control-leaning multifilament, not a trampoline-style string.
Quick verdict
Babolat Xplore Review – Babolat Xplore delivers excellent comfort, elite tension maintenance and a controlled, low-powered response.
The feel is soft but not overly elastic, and the standout trait is how stable and consistent it plays over time.
👉 Ideal if you want comfort with control and consistency
👉 Not ideal if you want power, spin or a lively stringbed
What the numbers say
Independent lab-style scoring for Babolat Xplore below.
Babolat Xplore — Performance Scores
How it plays (feel, spin, power, control)
Feel
Xplore feels soft, but not lively.
- Comfortable and arm-friendly
- Slightly muted response
- Less pocketing than premium multis
👉 It feels controlled rather than plush
Power
Power is clearly below average for a multifilament.
No trampoline effect
Requires player input
Depth must be generated
👉 This is one of the lowest-powered multis in its category.
Spin
Spin is limited.
- Minimal snapback
- Relies entirely on technique
- More neutral than aggressive
👉 Not built for spin-heavy play
Control
This is where Xplore stands out.
- Predictable response
- Easy to manage depth
- Doesn’t over-launch
👉 Much more controlled than typical multis like Xcel
Pros and Cons – Babolat Xplore
Babolat Xplore Review – Here’s a quick pros and cons snapshot for Babolat Xplore:
Durability & tension maintenance

Babolat Xplore Review – This is where Xplore really separates itself.
Playability phases:
Fresh (0–3 hrs):
- Controlled, slightly muted
- Comfortable
- Very predictable
Mid (3–10 hrs):
- Performance stays stable
- Minimal tension loss
- Control remains consistent
Late stage:
- Slight softening
- Power increases slightly
- Still usable longer than most multis
👉 The 100 tension holding score is the standout — this string stays playable far longer than typical multifilaments. See my Tennis racket string tension chart guide here.
Who it suits
Best For:
- Control-focused players
- Players with arm issues
- Intermediate players
- Flat hitters or moderate spin players
- Players who value consistency over explosiveness
Not For:
- Players needing easy power
- Heavy topspin hitters
- Players wanting a lively stringbed
- Advanced players needing maximum performance
Best suited racquets
Babolat Xplore Review – Xplore works best in powerful or stiff racquets where you need control and comfort:
- Babolat Pure Drive — tames power
- Yonex EZONE 100 — adds control
- Dunlop FX 500 — reduces launch
- Head Extreme MP — balances spin frames
- Wilson Ultra 100 — controls depth
👉 In lower-powered control racquets, it may feel underpowered
Comparable strings to Babolat Xplore
Babolat Xplore Review – If you are considering Babolat Xplore, you might also want to look at:
Comparable Strings — “Overall Fit” Snapshot
Real-world comparisons (not lab data) — how Babolat Xplore stacks up against close alternatives.
Practible recommendations
Tension: 23–25 kg (50–55 lbs). Drop slightly if you need more depth.
Gauge: 1.25mm is ideal. Go thinner if you need more liveliness.
Setup: Best as a full bed for comfort + control. Also works well in hybrids to soften poly setups.
Restringing: You can leave this in longer than most multis, but once it starts feeling too muted or loses bite, cut it out.
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