The Lost Vape URSA Pocket is a gaming-style refillable pod kit with up to 30W output, a large screen, and a back-lit panel that makes it stand out from slimmer stick-style pods. In our testing, it delivered steady flavor and genuinely useful airflow control, but it feels thicker in the pocket and the playful extras will not suit everyone.
Table of Contents
Product Overview
| Device | Overall Score | Pros | Cons | Ideal For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| URSA Pocket | 4.3/5.0 | Useful MTL/RDL range, consistent flavor, clear screen | Thick in pocket, bold styling, fiddly full refills | Adults who want adjustment and personality |
Final Verdict

The URSA Pocket feels more like a small gadget than a stripped-down pod. In our testing, the output stayed stable, the screen was easy to read at a glance, and the airflow adjustment made real changes to the draw. The trade-off is simple: it is thicker and visually louder than cleaner pod systems.
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Who It’s For
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Adults who want adjustable wattage and airflow
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MTL users who sometimes loosen the draw for light RDL
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Anyone who wants more personality than a plain pod
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Who It’s Not For
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Anyone who wants the slimmest possible carry
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Users who dislike bright panels and a gadget-heavy UI
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Anyone who wants a zero-learning-curve pod
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How We Tested It
We used the URSA Pocket across a workweek using our full test process and both included pods, switching between tighter MTL and looser RDL settings while tracking flavor, throat hit, vapor production, airflow/draw, battery life, leak resistance, build quality, ease of use, and portability. We logged wattage ranges we would actually use, refilled repeatedly to watch for condensation or seepage, timed charging, and carried it in pockets and bags to see how it behaved in normal daily use.
Our Testing Experience

The URSA Pocket stayed in rotation on commutes, quick desk breaks, and evening errands because the screen made it easy to grab and immediately see battery and wattage. With the 0.8Ω pod, we stayed around 12.5–13.5W and kept the airflow nearly closed; the draw felt snug without feeling choked, and simple fruit liquids came through clean and smooth. Marcus had more fun with the 0.6Ω pod around 16.5–19W, where the draw opened up into a light RDL pull and the vapor got warmer and denser without turning harsh. Jamal’s pocket-carry verdict stayed the same after a few days: it is portable, but you notice the thickness, and the back panel is not subtle.
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What we liked
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Flavor stayed predictable after repeated refills
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The airflow range changed the draw in a meaningful way
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The screen made daily use faster
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Who it is best for
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Adults who switch between MTL and light RDL
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Users who want a screen and quick tuning
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People who enjoy a little extra gadget feel
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Where it falls short
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It is chunkier than most slim pods
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The back panel can feel distracting
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Refilling all the way to the rated capacity is a little finicky
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Pros & Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Steady flavor through the day | Thicker carry than most pocket pods |
| Useful control over wattage and airflow | The styling is not subtle |
| Dual activation is practical | It can feel full before it reaches rated capacity |
| The screen reduces daily guesswork | The extra UI feels unnecessary for some users |
| Good leak control in normal use | Pods are not the cheapest long-term buy |
Details

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Street price we saw: about $29.99
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Device type: refillable pod system with gaming-style interface
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Power: 5–30W adjustable
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Battery: 1200mAh internal; USB-C charging (up to 5V/2A)
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Pod capacity: 2.5ml (regional variants may differ)
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Included pods: 0.6Ω and 0.8Ω cartridges
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Activation + airflow: draw activation and button firing; side airflow adjustment for tighter MTL to looser RDL
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Materials + size: aluminum alloy/plastic body, about 95.2 × 46.2 × 19mm; our scale read roughly 86–88g depending on trim and lanyard
Review Score
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor | 4.4 | Clean, repeatable flavor; strongest with the 0.8Ω pod in MTL use |
| Throat Hit | 4.2 | Easy to tune, though it gets sharper if you push warmth too hard |
| Vapor Production | 4.1 | Strong for a pod, especially with the 0.6Ω pod in the mid-to-high teens |
| Airflow/Draw | 4.3 | Adjustments produce real changes instead of tiny ones |
| Battery Life | 4.0 | Comfortable for a day of moderate use; heavier sessions drain it faster |
| Leak Resistance | 4.4 | Stayed tidy through normal refills and pocket carry |
| Build Quality | 4.5 | Feels solid in hand, with buttons and fit that seem deliberate |
| Ease of Use | 4.2 | The screen helps, but the extra interface adds a mild learning curve |
| Portability | 4.3 | Pocketable and sturdy, just not especially slim |
| Overall | 4.3 | A capable daily pod for adults who want control and a bit more visual personality |
How to Choose the Lost Vape URSA Pocket
Pick it if you want a refillable pod that gives you more to work with than a plain stick device. Adjustable wattage, meaningful airflow control, and a readable screen make quick changes easy. It fits adults who mostly vape MTL but sometimes want a slightly looser RDL draw, and it makes sense for users who like seeing battery and wattage without carrying a larger kit.
If discreet carry matters most, this is not the cleanest fit. The Vaporesso XROS 4 makes more sense if you want something slimmer, while the Uwell Caliburn G3 is the calmer comparison if flavor and a simpler look matter more.
Limitations

The URSA Pocket’s strengths come with a few trade-offs that kept showing up in daily use.
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It is thicker than most pocket pods, especially in jeans
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The back panel can feel out of place in quieter settings
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The rated capacity is not always easy to hit during real refills
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The extra UI and mini-games add complexity some users will not want
Lost Vape URSA Pocket vs Alternatives
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Why choose these models
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Alternatives to consider
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Vaporesso XROS 4: slimmer carry and very simple daily use
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Uwell Caliburn G3: stronger flavor focus with a calmer design
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OXVA XLIM Pro: adjustable performance in a more understated body
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Pro Tips for the Lost Vape URSA Pocket
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Start conservatively with the 0.8Ω pod in the low teens, then open airflow only after you find your preferred throat hit.
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Treat the 0.6Ω pod like a warm light-RDL setup; mid-to-high teen wattage kept flavor dense in our testing without making the puff feel papery.
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Refill slowly and pause before sealing the plug. Rushed refills are the easiest way to invite gurgle and early seepage.
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If you carry it in a pocket, lock it before walking around. Button devices can still get bumped.
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Wipe the pod base once a day. Light condensation is manageable when you catch it early.
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Do not max out the back-panel brightness in public unless you really want the device to stand out.
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Use a consistent liquid ratio in each pod. Big swings between thinner and thicker blends make repeatability worse.
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If the draw feels too soft, adjust airflow before raising wattage. That usually fixes it without making the vape harsher.
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Keep the lanyard as an occasional option rather than the default. It is useful on busy days, but it adds movement and bulk at a desk.
FAQs
Does the URSA Pocket handle both MTL and RDL well?
Yes. A tighter airflow setting with the 0.8Ω pod feels more like classic MTL, while the 0.6Ω pod with a more open airflow gives a relaxed light-RDL pull.
Is the screen actually useful, or just cosmetic?
Useful. Seeing wattage, battery, and status at a glance cuts down on guesswork between short sessions.
How messy is refilling in real life?
It is manageable, but not effortless. Slower fills and a quick wipe at the base keep it tidy.
What is the most common setup mistake?
Pushing the 0.6Ω pod too hard too quickly. Let airflow and draw do part of the work before you raise wattage.
About the Author: Chris Miller