Axe Throwing Tips: How to Throw Like a Pro (No Strength Needed)

How to Throw an Axe Like a Pro (It’s Not About Strength)

Axe throwing tips don’t have to be complicated. Walk into any axe throwing venue and you’ll see the same thing.

Someone steps up, winds up like they’re about to throw a fastball… and launches the axe straight into the floor.

It’s not their fault — it looks like a strength sport.

It’s not.

Axe throwing is about control, consistency, and one simple concept most people miss entirely:
Where you stand matters more than how hard you throw.

If you understand just two fundamentals, you’ll improve faster than 90% of first-time throwers.

Let’s break them down.

These axe throwing tips will help you improve faster than most beginners.

The Two Fundamentals of Axe Throwing

1. Your Throw Must Be Straight

This is non-negotiable.

A clean throw means:
• The axe travels in a straight line
• Your wrist stays locked
• Your release is smooth, not forced

If your axe is spinning sideways, wobbling, or drifting off target, nothing else matters yet.

Quick tip:
Think of your throw like tossing a dart — not throwing a baseball.

2. Find Your Spot (This Is Everything)

This is where most people go wrong.

Axe throwing is not about power. It’s about distance.

Your goal is simple:
Stand in the exact spot where the axe rotates once and lands blade-first — right on the toe of the axe.

If you’re not hitting the toe, your position is off.

What Your Axe Is Telling You (Read This Closely)

Your axe gives you instant feedback — you just need to know how to read it.

Hitting the Head or Back of the Axe?

You’re throwing too hard and/or standing too far away.

Fix:
Step forward slightly and ease up on power.

Hitting With the Full Blade or Bottom of the Handle?

You’re too close.

Fix:
Step back slightly until it sticks that toe!

The Biggest Myth in Axe Throwing

Let’s kill it right now:

“You need strength to stick the axe.”

You don’t.

In fact, throwing harder usually makes things worse:
• Less control
• Over-rotation
• More misses

The best throwers look almost effortless.

It’s smooth. Controlled. Repeatable.

Why This Matters (Especially for Beginners)

Most new throwers:
• Stand in the wrong spot
• Throw too hard
• Try to “muscle” the axe in

That leads to frustration fast.

But once you understand distance and rotation?

Everything clicks.

Common Beginner Mistakes (And How to Fix Them)

Most beginners struggle for the same reasons:

• Throwing too hard
• Standing in the wrong spot
• Trying to aim instead of focusing on form

The fix isn’t complicated — it’s about slowing down, adjusting your position, and letting the axe do the work.

Once you stop forcing the throw, your accuracy improves almost immediately.

Pro Tip: Adjust in Inches, Not Feet

When dialing in your throw:

Don’t take big steps
Move in small adjustments

Sometimes 2–3 inches is the difference between:
• bouncing off the target
• sticking dead center

Bringing It All Together

If you remember nothing else, remember this:

Throw straight
Find your spot

That’s it.

Master those two things, and you’ll be hitting more bullseyes than people who’ve been throwing for months.

Want to Take It Further?

Once your throw is dialed in, the real fun begins.

Try different game modes
Compete with friends
Track your scores and improve over time

That’s exactly what Bullsy is built for.

[Explore Bullsy Games]

A corporate event with the bullsy app.

Why Simple Scoring Makes Axe Throwing More Fun (And Why Bullsy Is Built That Way)

75 top notch speakers who master the art of engaging their audience. Each and every one of them covers a topic that is extremely relevant for today’s world we live in. Never underestimate the power of a

Axe throwing has exploded in popularity over the last decade — and with its growth has come a wave of scoring systems, formats, house rules, league variations, and regional quirks.
Some venues keep it classic. Others layer on bonus zones, killshots, multipliers, challenges, and alternative targets.

But here’s the truth:

Simple scoring is almost always better for actual gameplay.

Whether you’re throwing with first-timers, running a competitive league, or just trying to keep the night moving, clarity beats complexity every single time. That’s why Bullsy was built on the fundamentals of great game design: fast, frictionless, and intuitive.

1. Players learn faster, and confidence builds quicker

Nothing slows a game down like trying to explain a complicated scoring system before anyone has even touched an axe.

Simple scoring means:

  • No confusion

  • No long explanations

  • Less downtime

  • More time actually throwing

For new throwers, early confidence is everything. When scoring “just makes sense,” players get into the flow faster — and have a better experience.

Bullsy’s scoring layouts reflect this: clean buttons, clear values, consistent results. No hunting through menus, no mental math, no hesitation.

2. It keeps the energy high

Axe throwing is supposed to feel fast and a little chaotic — in a good way.
When scoring bogs things down, the entire rhythm of the lane suffers.

Simple inputs mean:

  • Faster turn rotations

  • More throws per hour

  • A smoother group experience

  • Happier players

Bullsy updates scores instantly, highlights the current thrower, and moves the game forward with zero friction. The scoreboard keeps the pace electric.

3. It reduces arguments and referee moments

You know the drill:

“Wait, is that inside the ring or on the line?”
“Do we count that as a 1 or a 3?”
“What’s the rule for hitting the 7 twice?”
“How many killshots do we get?”

Simple scoring = fewer debates = happier groups.

By standardizing values (1, 3, 5, 7) and keeping the UI crystal-clear, Bullsy creates a consistent experience that groups can rely on. And for venues, consistency makes management easier across staff, shifts, and locations.

4. It scales beautifully from beginners to leagues

Bullsy’s core games use simple scoring but layered mechanics:

  • Twenty One: push-your-luck math strategy

  • Knockout: complete objectives, manage risks

  • Axe Royale: life-based elimination drama

The mechanics are deep, but the scoring is simple. That’s what makes Bullsy versatile enough for:

  • casual groups

  • birthday parties

  • bachelor/bachelorette events

  • seasonal leagues

  • serious competitors

It works everywhere.

 

5. Most importantly — simple scoring makes the game more fun

Recreational players shouldn’t need to learn a subculture. They shouldn’t need a rulebook. They shouldn’t feel lost.

They should:

  • throw

  • score

  • compete

  • celebrate

  • repeat

Bullsy was created to keep the fun front-and-center — because that’s what brings people back.

Final Thoughts

Whether you’re running a lane, running a league, or running up a high score, simple scoring delivers the smoothest, most engaging axe throwing experience.

Bullsy embraces that simplicity — because the best games aren’t complicated.
They’re fun. Fast. Addictive. And unforgettable.