TaylorMade Qi35 Designer Series: The Audacity Of Hope (And Gold)
Drivers

TaylorMade Qi35 Designer Series: The Audacity Of Hope (And Gold)

Support our Mission. We independently test each product we recommend. When you buy through our links, we may earn a commission.

TaylorMade Qi35 Designer Series: The Audacity Of Hope (And Gold)

We’ve talked about this kind of thing before. As we move deeper into golf season (and especially into Year Two of any driver’s lifecycle), brands start pulling out all the stops to hook the golfer who somehow resisted their initial charm offensive.

In recent weeks we’ve seen limited-edition drivers, a parade of limited-edition golf balls, even a limited-edition Chipotle-themed headcover that makes you question both your life choices and the state of modern marketing.

Weird doesn’t begin to cover it.

What I’m driving at is this: If you haven’t bought a Qi35 driver yet, TaylorMade hopes this latest run of designer series offerings will finally separate you from your money. And, boy, they brought some … choices.

Designer Series Gold and Platinum

This latest TaylorMade Qi35 Designer Series drop brings two distinct colorways that beg the question “are you absolutely sure about this?”

While the Gold and Platinum technically are separate offerings, I’m lumping them together because they both represent the same fundamental question: “What if we just … went for it?”

Let’s start with some context from TaylorMade’s design team.

“The cool thing about Designer Series is that we can only do this in limited quantities and that allows us to do something outside the norm. Whether it’s how paints and pigments are sourced, how they’re applied, or drawing inspiration from different places like aeronautics or the automobile industry, it’s a continual learning and evolution process.” – Robert Nunez, Principal Designer of Product Creation

When I first read “gold and platinum” in the press release, I assumed we were talking about tasteful accents—maybe some subtle highlights here and there, nothing too flashy.

I was wrong. So very wrong.

Available in the core Qi35 and Qi35 Max, TaylorMade’s Gold and Platinum options represent a full commitment to what can only be described as “maximum visual impact.” When they said “Gold”, they meant gold—the entire clubhead (minus the face and accent text) is gold. Not gold-ish. Not gold-inspired. Gold.

Same goes for “Platinum” which is to say the whole damn thing is silver and proud of it.

It’s a bold strategy, Cotton.

On one hand, I’m genuinely impressed. Each colorway represents an unrepentantly audacious design choice that refuses to apologize for itself. There’s something refreshing about a company that says, “You know what? Let’s make a gold driver and see what happens.”

On the other hand … Wow! These things are going to be visible from the space station. I’m not entirely sure how the golf world is going to react when someone shows up to the first tee with what looks like a trophy instead of a driver.

The Verdict

I need to know what you think about these.

Released earlier this year, the first Designer Series option (Gloss Black) was basically Aaron Judge facing a batting-practice fastball—easy money, guaranteed crowd-pleaser, destined for success.

Gold and Platinum?

That’s a different conversation entirely. I suppose it’s easier to be daring when you’re only making limited quantities but someone is going to have to be the first person to pull one of these out of their bag at their home course. That takes a special kind of confidence.

Or a complete lack of self-awareness. The jury’s still out.

Pricing and Availability

TaylorMade Qi35 Designer Series Gold and Platinum drivers are available now with a retail price of $649.99.

For You

For You

News
Jun 19, 2026
Scratch By 50: I Switched From The Worst-Rated Driver To The Best-Rated Driver
News
Jun 19, 2026
Everything Fell Apart On The 5th hole. Here’s How to Save Your Score Anyway.
News
Jun 18, 2026
AskMyGolfSpy: The Equipment We Use To Test Your Equipment
Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony is the Editor of MyGolfSpy where his job is to bring fresh and innovative content to the site. In addition to his editorial responsibilities, he was instrumental in developing MyGolfSpy's data-driven testing methodologies and continues to sift through our data to find the insights that can help improve your game. Tony believes that golfers deserve to know what's real and what's not, and that means MyGolfSpy's equipment coverage must extend beyond the so-called facts as dictated by the same companies that created them. Most of all Tony believes in performance over hype and #PowerToThePlayer.

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey





    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

      HikingMike

      1 year ago

      I’ll take a silver, that looks pretty darn cool actually. Wait, wait, how much does a new driver cost again?

      Reply

      The Artful Duffer

      1 year ago

      Maybe they’d have better luck re-releasing the QI10 in these. How down are driver sales since it seems nobody is preferring the 35 to the 10?

      Reply

      Well we know what demographic the gold ones will appeal to.

      Reply

      Donn Rutkoff

      1 year ago

      I want one of each, you know, one for home, one on the road. When I wear my Babe Ruth Yankee pinstripe golf pants.

      Reply

      Kyle

      1 year ago

      Hot. Golf can be boring. Keep it fun.

      Reply

      Ron

      1 year ago

      And to think that Cobra used to take so much flak for their decision to offer red, blue, green and Rickie Fowler orange drivers (all of which I thought looked better in person than I thought they would). Now Cobra’s last 2 model line-ups have been so black and stealthy that Disaster Area’s stunt ship from Hitchhiker’s Guide comes to mind:

      “It’s so… black!” said Ford Prefect. “You can hardly make out its shape… light just seems to fall into it!” The blackness of it was so extreme that it was almost impossible to tell how close you were standing to it.

      TM does have a history of doing stuff like this – Burner Bubble copper, their white drivers (which I hated, particularly the claim that white had a calming effect on you at address).

      While I haven’t seen either in person, I agree with FAKE that they look cheap in the photos. Still, a few people will buy them. You know, the guy in your foursome who wears the shirts that look like color blindness tests and hurt your eyes. And they may be just the thing to go with the Aimé Leon Dore Footjoys that dropped the other day.

      Reply

      KJC

      1 year ago

      Kim Kardasian and Elton John (if they are still alive) can do a promo for social media.

      Reply

      Fake

      1 year ago

      I just saw the gold one on the range this past weekend but had no idea what it was. Is it bad to say that it looked cheap?

      Reply

      OpMan

      1 year ago

      So……. who decided to steal this idea from Honma and Daiwa? LMAO
      Trying to sell more to the Asian people, eh? LMAO

      Reply

      M.C. Shirt

      1 year ago

      This is so hideous and offensive that I WANT THE GOLD ONE!!!

      Reply

      Steve P

      1 year ago

      Reeks of desperation for sales in a down year from TM.

      Reply

      JR

      1 year ago

      Yo! Mr. Tee

      Reply

      Bri

      1 year ago

      I pity the fool…

      Reply

    Leave A Reply

    required
    required
    required (your email address will not be published)

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    News
    Jun 19, 2026
    Scratch By 50: I Switched From The Worst-Rated Driver To The Best-Rated Driver
    News
    Jun 19, 2026
    Everything Fell Apart On The 5th hole. Here’s How to Save Your Score Anyway.
    News
    Jun 18, 2026
    AskMyGolfSpy: The Equipment We Use To Test Your Equipment