Tyson 2.0 Round 2 sits in the “high-capacity rechargeable disposable” lane, and it leans hard on convenience features like a screen and USB-C charging. I reviewed it because devices in this class often look similar on paper, yet the day-to-day feel can swing wildly. Flavor stability, draw behavior, and condensation control ended up being the three variables that mattered most.

What is the Tyson 2.0 Round 2?
Tyson 2.0 Round 2 is a draw-activated disposable that’s built to run for extended use, with a rechargeable 650 mAh battery, USB-C charging, and a screen that shows battery and e-liquid status. It’s commonly listed with 5% nicotine salt and about 7,500+ puffs, plus a mesh coil and adjustable airflow. Main risks in real use tend to be the same ones that show up in most high-output disposables: strong nicotine impact for sensitive users, sweetness fatigue, and mouthpiece condensation if you chain-puff.
Why choose the Tyson 2.0 Round 2?
It fits adult nicotine users who want a disposable that still behaves like a “daily driver,” especially if you like restricted DL or an open MTL draw that you can tune with airflow. It also fits people who want bold, sweet flavors and like having a screen to manage timing and charging. It’s a weaker match for anyone who needs an ultra-tight MTL, dislikes cooling, or gets tired of syrupy sweetness fast. It’s also not the cleanest choice for people who hate any mouthpiece moisture, since this class of device can build condensation during frequent short sessions.

How We Tested It
We used Tyson 2.0 Round 2 for 3 days, rotating it through commuter-style bursts and longer desk sessions, landing around 100–300 puffs per day. We kept the nicotine level consistent with the commonly listed 5% salt version, and we used airflow changes to check how stable the draw felt across settings. Since it’s rechargeable, we tracked charging behavior across top-up cycles and logged battery drop versus session length. We also logged condensation, any leaking, flavor fade, and heat around the body during repeated pulls.
Performance Scores of the Vape
Test window: 3 days, with mixed short and long sessions at ~100–300 puffs/day
Rubric: scores reflect observable behavior (draw stability, condensation, heat, usability) plus subjective taste and throat hit
Device class: rechargeable disposable with USB-C, screen, and adjustable airflow
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor | 4.2 | Bright, punchy profiles; sweetness stays strong deep into use, though it can feel heavy after long sessions |
| Throat Hit | 3.9 | Noticeable hit on longer pulls; smoother on shorter puffs, with less bite than some harsher 5% disposables |
| Vapor Production | 4.1 | Dense output on steady pulls; stays consistent unless I chain-puffed hard |
| Airflow/Draw | 4.0 | Airflow adjustment gives real range, from tighter to more open; activation stays reliable |
| Battery Life | 4.0 | Rechargeable behavior makes it easier to stretch; screen helps avoid surprise drop-offs |
| Leak Resistance | 3.8 | No true leaking in my run, but mouthpiece moisture showed up during frequent bursts |
| Build Quality | 3.9 | Functional and steady in use; body feels “disposable-grade,” with some cosmetic wear over pocket time |
| Ease of Use | 4.4 | Draw activation plus a screen keeps it simple; USB-C charging reduces friction |
| Portability | 4.1 | Pocketable and easy to carry; thicker than tiny sticks, but still commute-friendly |
| Overall Score | 4.0 | Strong flavor and usability, with typical condensation tradeoffs for the category |

Our Testing Experience
Our Testing Results
Across the three days, I carried the Round 2 through a normal loop: short pulls while walking, a longer set of pulls at a desk, then quick hits again at night. The screen changed how I used it. Instead of guessing, I checked battery and liquid before leaving the house and avoided running it bone-dry, which usually makes flavor go weird on long-life disposables.
Marcus leaned into heavier sessions. He pushed longer, deeper pulls and treated it like a high-output disposable. The device stayed stable most of the time, but the body did warm up when he stacked pulls without pause. Jamal used it the way many people actually do: frequent, short bursts while moving. That pattern exposed the main annoyance we saw, which was mouthpiece condensation that built up faster when the device went in and out of a pocket.
I also checked listings while researching the product, and prices were scattered. I saw examples around 20+ range depending on retailer and discounting. The spread is real, so price only helps when you’re comparing the specific store you plan to use.
Draw Experience
I focused on three flavors that show up repeatedly in listings: Mint Berry, Frozen Grape, and Cherry Banana.
Mint Berry delivered a clean sweet-berry base with a cool finish that built over a longer pull. After heavier use, the cooling felt more forward than the fruit, which made it better for quick hits than marathon sessions. Frozen Grape came across as candy-grape with a colder edge, and it stayed consistent even when I pushed the device past my usual puff count. Cherry Banana was the most “dessert-like” of the three, with a thick sweet banana tone that lingered. It was satisfying early, then it became the flavor most likely to feel syrupy when I kept hitting it back-to-back.

Pros & Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Screen makes battery and e-liquid tracking straightforward | Mouthpiece condensation can build up during frequent short sessions |
| Adjustable airflow provides meaningful range in draw feel | Sweet profiles can fatigue faster if you prefer drier, lighter flavors |
| Strong flavor intensity stays present deep into the device’s life | Cooling-forward flavors can dominate the profile on longer pulls |
| USB-C charging reduces the “dead disposable” problem | Body can warm up if you chain-puff without breaks |
| Draw activation stayed consistent in varied pacing | Disposable-grade shell picks up cosmetic wear during pocket carry |
Key Specs
| Spec | Detail |
|---|---|
| Device type | Disposable, rechargeable |
| Activation method | Draw-activated |
| Nicotine type | Nicotine salt |
| Nicotine strength | 5% |
| E-liquid capacity | 16 mL |
| Puff count | ~7,500+ |
| Battery capacity | 650 mAh |
| Charging | USB-C |
| Airflow | Adjustable |
| Coil | Mesh coil (often listed as “Fyre Mesh Coil”) |
| Screen | Battery + e-liquid indicator display |
| Coil resistance | - |
| Estimated charge time | - |
| Tank/pod capacity (separate) | - |

Tyson 2.0 Round 2 Vs. Alternatives
Pick Round 2 if you want a rechargeable disposable with a screen and adjustable airflow, and you like flavors that stay bold instead of drifting bland halfway through.
If you’re shopping in the same lane, I’d cross-shop it against devices that also focus on long runtime and convenience features. One practical comparison is Lost Mary OS5000 if you want a simpler, lighter carry and don’t care about a screen. Another is Elf Bar BC5000 if you want familiar flavor style and broad availability, even though it doesn’t match the same screen-first experience.
Pro Tips for Tyson 2.0 Round 2
- Use the screen as a routine tool, not a novelty. A quick check before leaving home avoids running it low at the worst time.
- If you notice mouthpiece moisture, wipe it early. A small tissue swipe beats letting condensation pool into the next draw.
- When the body starts to feel warm, pause for a minute. Heat climbs fastest during stacked pulls.
- Treat airflow changes like a flavor knob. A slightly tighter setting often boosts flavor density, while a more open setting can soften throat hit.
- Charge with a steady USB source. A laptop port or a low-output adapter tends to keep charging behavior predictable.
- Don’t chase the last drop of liquid with constant long pulls. The end of life is where “taste drift” shows up on most big-puff disposables.
- If a flavor starts to feel too sweet, rotate to a sharper profile (mint or fruit). Palate fatigue usually hits the candy flavors first.
- Keep it upright in a pocket when you can. Pocket lint and odd angles can make mouthpiece cleanup more annoying than it needs to be.
- If you carry it daily, expect cosmetic wear. A simple silicone sleeve can keep the shell from getting beat up in a bag.

FAQs
Does the Tyson 2.0 Round 2 have adjustable airflow?
Yes. Many listings describe it with adjustable airflow, and in use it behaves like a real airflow slider rather than a fake “decoration.”
What nicotine strength is it usually sold in?
Common references list it at 5% nicotine salt. Some retailers may carry different options, but 5% is the version that shows up most consistently.
How many puffs does it claim?
It’s commonly marketed around 7,500+ puffs, tied to the 16 mL fill size and the rechargeable battery design. Real-life totals will vary with puff length and pacing.
Is it rechargeable, and what kind of charging port does it use?
It’s commonly listed as rechargeable with USB-C charging. That pairing matters in daily use, since it prevents the “battery died but liquid remains” problem that shows up on non-rechargeable big disposables.
About the Author: Chris Miller