Sub 70 669 MB Undercuts $1,500 Blade Pricing — The Sub
Golf Monthly says the sub 70 669 MB iron delivers premium blade feel while undercutting the $1,500 level that has long defined the top end of the category. For low-handicap players, that means a direct-to-consumer option with a more approachable price and a shape built for precision.
Sub 70 669 MB review
The review called the 669 MB a masterclass in modern blade design. It described a refined, mid-boxy profile, exceptionally soft feel, and a pre-ground leading edge that helps the club move through turf with superb efficiency.
It also pointed to minimal branding, soft CNC milling lines, and knurling around the hosel. Those details signal a club built to prioritize strike quality and visual simplicity over decoration.
32° 7-iron, 45° wedge
The loft setup is part of the story. The 669 MB 7-iron sits at 32°, and the pitching wedge sits at 45°.
A traditional blade 7-iron is often 34°. Starting at 32° gives a penetrating flight without giving up the clean, low-offset look that better players often want.
Premium blade value
The review said the iron’s feel at impact is exceptional, soft, responsive, and remarkably pure when struck out of the center. It also called the 669 MB one of the best-value irons in golf and said it rivals, and often exceeds, the industry giants.
The friction point is clear: Sub 70 sells direct to consumers, which makes the brand harder to try before buying than shelf brands. That tradeoff leaves buyers weighing savings and performance against the chance to test the club in person.
For golfers chasing a premium blade without paying more than $1,500, the review puts the 669 MB on the shortlist. The practical question now is whether that value case holds once a player gets it into a fitting bay and sees how the 32° 7-iron and 45° pitching wedge match their own window.