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Cleveland

Cleveland RTX Full Face 2 Wedge

Versatile202550°-60°

The RTX Full Face 2 does one thing that most wedges can't: it puts grooves everywhere. Cleveland ran the UltiZip grooves all the way across the face, heel to toe and up to the top edge, so the ball still grabs when you open the face wide or catch a shot off the toe. If you play a lot of flop shots, greenside cutters, and open-face bunker escapes, that extra grooved real estate is the whole point.

This is the 2025 update to the original Full Face, and it slots in as the most versatile wedge in Cleveland's RTX lineup. You can get it in 50 through 60 degrees, so it works as a dedicated lob or sand wedge for creative players, not just a specialty club. The C-shaped sole is ground to sit low when the face is open, which is exactly the position you want it in for the shots this wedge is built for.

What it isn't: a set-it-and-forget-it full-swing wedge. The Full Face 2 rewards players who like to manipulate the clubface and get funky around the green. If you take a square, straightforward path to every pin, a standard RTX wedge will feel more familiar. This one is for the golfer who sees five ways to play a shot and wants a face that can spin all of them.

Cleveland RTX Full Face 2 Wedge: Key Specs

Category
Versatile
Loft range
50 to 60 degrees
Loft/grind options
6
Model year
2025
MSRP
$149.99

Available Variants

LoftBounceGrindFinish
50°10°-Chrome
52°10°-Chrome
54°12°-Chrome
56°12°-Chrome
58°12°-Chrome
60°8°-Chrome

Loft and bounce are nominal values. Actual specifications may vary.

About the Cleveland RTX Full Face 2

The headline feature is the full-face groove pattern. Cleveland's UltiZip grooves are cut with a sharper, deeper spec and rotated laser milling covers the entire hitting area, so contact high on the face or out toward the toe still produces friction and spin. On a normal wedge those strikes just slide up the face and knuckle onto the green with no bite. The sole is a C-grind shape with heel and toe relief, which lets the head rotate open without the leading edge lifting off the turf. Cleveland raised the center of gravity slightly to keep flight down on those delicate partial shots, and the wedge comes in a Tour Satin finish that cuts glare at address. Lofts run from 50 to 60 degrees in two-degree steps, and the higher lofts are where the full-face design earns its keep.

Who Should Play the Cleveland RTX Full Face 2?

  • You play greenside shots with an open face and want spin even when you catch the ball off the toe.
  • Flop shots, high spinning cutters, and short-sided escapes are a normal part of your short game.
  • You already have solid touch and want a wedge that keeps up with the shots you try, not one that limits them.
  • Bunker play where you open the face wide is a strength, or something you want to lean into.
  • You want one versatile lob or sand wedge that handles the creative stuff a standard wedge can't.

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes the RTX Full Face 2 different from a regular RTX wedge?

The grooves cover the entire face instead of stopping short of the toe and top edge. That means open-face and toe-side shots still get real spin, which a standard wedge can't deliver on those strikes. The Full Face 2 also uses a C-grind sole built to sit flush when the face is open. A regular RTX is the better pick if you play most wedge shots square.

Which loft should I get in the Full Face 2?

It comes in 50, 52, 54, 56, 58, and 60 degrees. The 58 and 60 are where the full-face grooves matter most, since those are the clubs you open up for flops and bunker shots. Many players carry it as their lob wedge at 58 or 60 and run a more traditional grind at pitching and gap wedge lofts. If you want it as your sand wedge, 54 or 56 works well.

Is the Full Face 2 good for high handicappers?

It can help, but it isn't really aimed at them. The full-face grooves reward players who open the face and play creative shots, and a beginner who mostly hits square chips won't tap into that. If you're still building a consistent short game, a more forgiving cavity-back wedge or a standard sand wedge will serve you better. Get the Full Face 2 once you're experimenting around the green.

Does the full-face groove design really add spin on open shots?

Yes, on the specific shots it's built for. When you open the face for a flop or lay it wide open in a bunker, contact moves toward the toe and up the face, areas a normal wedge leaves smooth. The UltiZip grooves there grab the ball and produce spin instead of letting it slide. On a square, centered strike you won't notice much difference from a standard RTX.

What sole grind does the RTX Full Face 2 use?

It uses a C-shaped grind with heel and toe relief. That shape lets the head rotate open without the leading edge rising off the ground, so the club still sits low and clean when you lay the face back. It performs best on firm to medium turf and in the sand. On very soft, fluffy conditions a wider, higher-bounce sole would dig less.

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