Zuru tends to occupy the less expensive spectrum of foam flinging, from small pistols like the Reflex 6 and Xcess to larger platforms like the Regenerator and Turbo Advance. However, there’s an area around the $20 mark that’s mainly occupied by box sets of smaller blasters, and not a midsize blaster. The Turbo Fire fits that niche, offering both twenty shots and slam-fire capabilities. However, it has some issues with the “slam-fire” mode, which make it slightly less useful (but that’s easily fixed). Overall, though, it’s still a nice blaster that may be worth a look.
Reimagining an Original
The Turbo Fire was, earlier this decade, one of Zuru’s main blasters, featuring pump action and twenty shots. It originally came in green, and featured several iterations before coming off of shelves. 2019 now features the redesign.
The grip is decently large, with an enclosed thumbhole but no real stock to speak of. It has textured molding and is easy to grip and use. On the whole, the blaster feels sufficiently sturdy in hand. Not quite the same feel as a Nerf-branded blaster, but good enough to not feel cheap.
Admittedly, I’m torn on the design. It seems like a long blaster for holding out in front of you (no real stock, after all) and slam-firing. It could’ve lost the front “barrel” and still have been a fine looking, but shorter blaster, more like a pistol. However, that’s a matter of personal taste.
Internals – And a Problem To Address
Performance
The Turbo Fire, when firing properly, hit 82fps on average with the included darts, and 76fps with Elite darts. With slam-fire working as intended, I was able to hit almost four darts per second in rate of fire. Good performance, as you’d expect from modern Xshot blasters.
Final Thoughts
Zuru has a nice pattern or redesigning their older blasters so far, with updates on the Reflex 6, Xcess, and now the Turbo Fire. $20 gets a mid-sized blaster with great performance and ammo capacity, but it does have a potential issue with slam-fire that may need to be addressed in order for the blaster to fully function as intended. Once it does, however, it’s a great option for an inexpensive stock blaster.