I had to make some adjustment to the large amount of offset which I was not used
to but once I did get accustomed to it I can say that the A25's are without a doubt for the player looking for Game Improvement. The high handicapper average golfer or simply someone who needs a big and forgiving iron. Feel is averaqe, it feels like a cast iron (not even titanium). The shaft is reasonably smooth and felt under control in my hands but again nothing spectacular. An undercut cavity like the Epon AF-701's to promote forgiveness and its large face area meant a very forgiving face as long as you don't hit it directly off the toe and heel. Beginner golfers, this could be the set for you.
Mizuno Japan introduces it's all new A25 iron for the JPX lineup. This is Mizuno's most forgiving iron ever, featuring a thicker topline and sole packaged in a forgiving cavity back design. The hot titanium face on the3-9PGS is made for feel and distance. This3-9PGS set comes with Mizuno Quad carbon graphite shafts available in R and S flex. Recommended for the player looking for a very easy set of irons to play.
The Mizuno JPX A25 iron is clearly the largest iron of the bunch and the closest thing to a Game Improvement iron based on its shovel appearance. The R flex shaft had some flex to it.I do not like the rubber grip that Mizuno uses on their new JPX line, it is hard and cheap looking and the reason they use it is because of its light weight. At setup the JPX A25 is huge.The A25's have a Titanium face but felt pretty solid unlike my previous Bridgestone Beam Ti Irons which felt very metallic on impact these felt solid.