The Lost Vape URSA Quest Multi Kit is a single-battery, 100W pod/mod hybrid built for direct-lung users who want big pod capacity plus the option to run a standard 510 tank. At a sale price of $42.35, it lands as a value-forward “do-most-things” device with strong versatility and a solid feel, but it’s not small, and coil life can be the weak link if you push power hard.
Product Overview
| Device | Overall Score | Pros | Cons | Ideal For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lost Vape URSA Quest Multi Kit | 4.2/5 | Pod + 510 versatility, big pods, strong output | Bulky, can get noisy open, coils can fade fast | DL/RDL users who want one device for pods and tanks |
Final Verdict
The URSA Quest Multi Kit is at its best when you treat it like a compact single-battery mod that just happens to run pod tanks exceptionally well—wide airflow, big refills, and flexible modes make it fun and practical, while the size and coil longevity keep it from being a clean “daily pocket” pick.
- Who It’s For
- DL/RDL users who want pods and 510 in one setup
- People who prefer external-battery runtime flexibility
- Anyone who likes tweaking modes (Power/VPC/Boost/TC)
- Who It’s Not For
- Stealth vapers who want a light, pocket-first device
- Strict MTL users who need a tight draw out of the box
- Anyone who hates frequent coil swaps under higher wattage

How We Tested It
We tested flavor, throat hit, vapor production, airflow/draw feel, battery life, leak resistance, build quality, ease of use, and portability across a week of everyday sessions. I rotated both included pods and coils, logging how the vape felt on first pull, mid-tank, and near coil fade. Marcus stress-tested higher wattage and longer pulls for heat and stability. Jamal focused on grab-and-go handling, pocket carry, and refill behavior.
Our Testing Experience
I started with the 7 mL pod and the 0.15Ω coil, sitting around 78W on Normal boost with airflow mostly open. The inhale felt broad and “roomy,” with a cool, dense fog and a throat hit that stayed firm without turning sharp. Marcus immediately pushed it harder—mid-80s watts—and the first thing he noticed wasn’t heat, it was sound: wide open, it can get loud; closing airflow to about halfway tightened the draw and made flavors read cleaner. Jamal lived on the 6 mL pod with the 0.2Ω coil around 50W, saying it felt smoother for quick sessions—less chaos in the mouth, more consistent texture from puff to puff. Battery life tracked the battery you choose: my 21700 averaged about 8.4 hours of real use around the mid-50W range, while an 18650 setup landed closer to 4.6 hours at ~60W. Leakage stayed low; the side-fill plugs didn’t weep unless we got sloppy with overfilling.
- What we liked
- Saturated, consistent vapor at practical daily wattages
- Big pods mean fewer refills and fewer “dry” surprise pulls
- 510 adapter makes it easy to swap to a standard tank
- Who it is best for
- DL users who want mod-style control without giving up pod convenience
- People who prefer a 21700 for longer stretches between swaps
- Anyone who likes experimenting with airflow and boost feel
- Where it falls short
- Bulkier than most pod-mods; pockets notice it
- Airflow can get noisy when you run it wide open
- Coils can fade quickly if you chain-vape near the top of their range

Pros & Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Versatile pod + 510 setup | Not pocket-friendly for most people |
| Strong 5–100W range with multiple modes | Airflow can get loud at higher power |
| Big pods reduce refill frequency | Coils can be thirsty and fade faster under heavy use |
| Clear screen and straightforward controls | External battery required (not included) |
| Solid, premium-leaning chassis feel | Best performance leans DL/RDL, not tight MTL |
Details
- Price (sale): $42.35
- Device type: pod/mod kit with included 510 adapter (pods or standard tanks)
- Output & modes: 5–100W; Power, TC, VPC, Bypass; Boost levels (Soft/Normal/Hard)
- Battery & charging: single 18650/20700/21700 (adapter included); USB-C charging; pass-through supported
- Pods & fill: 7 mL and 6 mL pods; side-fill silicone-stoppered
- Included coils: UB Pro P1 0.15Ω (70–90W); UB M4 0.2Ω (40–60W)
- Size & weight: 126 × 43 × 33 mm; 173 g

Review Score
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor | 4.2 | Best when airflow isn’t fully open; stays “clean” rather than syrupy |
| Throat Hit | 4.0 | Firm and predictable across both included coils |
| Vapor Production | 4.5 | Easy to get dense output without strain at mid-to-high wattage |
| Airflow/Draw | 4.1 | Wide range, but the top end can be noisy |
| Battery Life | 4.2 | Excellent with a 21700; acceptable with an 18650 adapter |
| Leak Resistance | 4.3 | Side-fill seals behave well if you don’t overfill |
| Build Quality | 4.4 | Feels solid; buttons and chassis come across durable |
| Ease of Use | 4.1 | Menu is learnable fast; swapping pods/coils is straightforward |
| Portability | 3.6 | Tall, thick, and heavier than most pod systems |
| Overall | 4.2 | A versatile, value-leaning pod/mod hybrid that rewards DL users |
Choosing the URSA Quest Multi Kit
Buy this if you want external-battery flexibility, big pod capacity, and the option to run a standard 510 tank on the same device. It makes the most sense for DL/RDL users who live between ~45–85W and like tuning airflow and boost feel; it’s a weaker fit if you need a compact, stealthy carry or a tight MTL draw without extra coil shopping. For a similar “single-battery, up to 100W” pod-mod approach, the VOOPOO Drag X Plus is a strong alternative. For a tougher, more outdoors-friendly direction, the GeekVape B100 Boost Pro 2 is worth a look.

Limitations
This device has clear trade-offs that show up in daily use:
- Bulk and weight make it a bag device more than a pocket device
- Airflow can get loud when run wide open at higher wattage
- Coil longevity can be average-to-short if you chain-vape near max range
URSA Quest vs Alternatives
- Why choose these models
- Want pod tanks plus a 510 option in one kit
- Prefer external-battery flexibility (especially 21700)
- Like multi-mode control (Power/VPC/Boost/TC)
- Alternatives to consider
- VOOPOO Drag X Plus: similar 100W class and external-battery style
- GeekVape B100 Boost Pro 2: rugged build focus, modern pod ecosystem
- Vaporesso LUXE XR MAX: internal battery, 80W, more compact carry
Pro Tips
- Start each new coil at the low end of its range, then climb in 2–3W steps until flavor peaks.
- For the 0.15Ω coil, treat 70–90W as a ceiling, not a lifestyle—midrange tends to be smoother.
- For the 0.2Ω coil, stay in the 40–60W zone; it’s usually the cleanest “all-day” setting band.
- If it’s getting loud, don’t fight it—close airflow slightly and let the coil do the work.
- Refill before the pod gets “low-low”; big pods still punish you if you run them dry near high wattage.
- Wipe the fill plug and pod base after refills to keep condensation from turning into seepage.
- If you’re carrying it, lock the controls and keep the airflow ring from being knocked fully open.
- Use a 21700 when you can; it changes the whole “all-day” feel of the device.
- Keep spare O-rings in your kit; most mystery leaks start there, not at the coil.
- If you swap to a 510 tank, double-check the adapter is snug before you start cranking wattage.
FAQs
Does it lean more DL or MTL?
Out of the box it’s DL/RDL leaning with the included coils and airflow range. A tighter MTL setup typically requires a higher-resistance UB MTL coil and a more restricted airflow approach.
Can I use a normal 510 tank on it?
Yes. The kit includes a 510 adapter, so you can run standard 510-threaded atomizers when you want to switch away from the pods.
What kind of battery life should I expect?
It depends on the battery you install and your wattage. Around ~60W, expect roughly 4–5 hours on an 18650 and 7–9 hours on a 21700 with typical on-and-off use.
Why does the airflow get noisy?
Wide-open airflow plus higher wattage tends to amplify turbulence. Slightly restricting airflow usually calms the sound and can sharpen flavor at the same time.
About the Author: Chris Miller