VOOPOO Drag M100S Review

VOOPOO Drag M100S is a single-battery (18650/21700) 100W mod-and-tank kit built around the Gene.TT 2.0 chip and paired with the leak-resistant top-airflow UFORCE-L tank; at $60.99 it fits adult DL/RDL users who want a compact daily driver with strong flavor and a quick lock switch, but it’s not ideal for tight MTL or anyone who expects truly all-day runtime from one cell.

Product Overview

Device Overall Score Pros Cons Ideal For
VOOPOO Drag M100S Kit 4.2/5.0 Clean top-airflow tank, quick lock switch, strong coil flavor Single-battery endurance, some minor rattle, not a true MTL kit Daily DL/RDL use, commuting, desk setup

Final Verdict

The Drag M100S kit hits a sweet spot: a genuinely comfortable single-battery mod with a practical lock slider and a top-airflow tank that behaves well in real life, especially with the included PnP-TW coils. The trade-off is predictable—one cell means you manage your wattage (and your expectations), and the kit’s “out of the box” setup leans DL/RDL far more than tight MTL.

Who It’s For

  • Adult DL/RDL users who like a 40–70W comfort zone
  • Pocket/commute users who want a lock switch they’ll actually use
  • Anyone who prioritizes top-airflow leak resistance over ultra-airy bottom airflow

Who It’s Not For

  • Tight-draw MTL purists who want a cigarette-like pull
  • People who hate swapping/charging external batteries
  • High-wattage chain vapers expecting dual-battery stamina
VOOPOO Drag M100S Kit

Test Method

We ran the Drag M100S through short “grab-and-go” sessions, longer desk sessions, and outdoor breaks while tracking Flavor, Throat Hit, Vapor Production, Airflow/Draw, Battery Life, Leak Resistance, Build Quality, Ease of Use, and Portability. We rotated the included PnP-TW coils at their typical wattage windows and monitored ramp time, warmth, and any off-notes as the tank level dropped. We also pocketed it locked/unlocked, checked for condensation around the mouthpiece, and logged charging behavior and day-to-day reliability.

Our Testing Experience

Day one, I started with the PnP-TW20 (0.2Ω) at 48–52W and immediately liked the “top-airflow” feel: the draw is smooth without that hollow whistle, and the mouthfeel comes through slightly warmer than you’d expect at the same wattage on a very open bottom-airflow tank. Flavor stayed clean as the tank dropped below half—no sudden flattening, no weird metallic edge, just a consistent, slightly dense vape that felt controlled instead of chaotic.

Marcus pushed the PnP-TW15 (0.15Ω) at 62–68W and kept hunting for hot spots; the mod stayed composed, but the vape is definitely “firm” at the top end—more punch than fluff. Jamal’s feedback was simple: lock it, pocket it, forget it. The slider lock became muscle memory, and that matters more than most specs. In our quick output checks, the top setting felt a touch shy of a perfect 100W in practice (we saw about 93W-ish behavior at the ceiling), which matches the general “close enough” single-battery reality.

What we liked

  • Smooth, controlled draw and steady flavor across the tank
  • Lock slider is fast and genuinely useful
  • Top-airflow tank behaved well with minimal mess

Who it is best for

  • Adult DL/RDL users living around 45–70W
  • Commuters who pocket a setup often
  • Anyone who wants “simple mod kit” without feeling cheap

Where it falls short

  • Single-battery endurance fades fast above ~65W
  • Not a tight MTL kit out of the box
  • Minor button/slider feel can vary (a little rattle on some units)
VOOPOO Drag M100S Kit

Pros & Cons

Pros Cons
Strong flavor on TW coils Single-battery runtime limits
Smooth top-airflow draw Not a true MTL kit stock
Lock slider makes pocket carry safer Minor button rattle possible
Comfortable hand feel Taller setup once tank is installed
Straightforward menu and modes Coil use can be juice-hungry

Key Specs

  • Price: $60.99
  • Device type: single-battery regulated mod kit with sub-ohm tank
  • Output: 5–100W; max output voltage 8.5V
  • Battery: 1×18650 or 1×21700 (adapter included; battery not included)
  • Charging: USB-C, 5V/2.5A
  • Tank: UFORCE-L, 5.5 mL, top fill, top airflow
  • Included coils: PnP-TW20 0.2Ω; PnP-TW15 0.15Ω
  • Mod size: 36×30×90 mm
VOOPOO Drag M100S Kit

Scorecard

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 4.4 TW coils deliver a full, consistent taste without odd drop-offs.
Throat Hit 4.1 Tunable by wattage; gets firm quickly on the TW15.
Vapor Production 4.5 Dense, satisfying DL clouds in the 50–70W range.
Airflow/Draw 4.2 Top airflow stays smooth and controlled, easy to dial in.
Battery Life 3.8 One cell means trade-offs; higher wattage shortens sessions fast.
Leak Resistance 4.4 Top-airflow design is forgiving and low-mess for daily carry.
Build Quality 4.2 Solid chassis overall, but minor button movement can happen.
Ease of Use 4.3 Smart mode + lock slider keeps it low-friction day to day.
Portability 3.9 Compact mod body, but tank height and weight add bulk.
Overall 4.2 A reliable, flavor-forward single-battery kit with sensible trade-offs.

Buying Guide

Choose the Drag M100S if you want an adult-oriented DL/RDL kit that lives comfortably between 40–70W, you’re fine running an external 18650/21700, and you value a quick lock for pocket carry. Skip it if you need tight MTL without swapping hardware or you hate managing batteries.

If you want a similar 100W single-battery kit with a different coil ecosystem and a slightly more “modern kit” feel, look at the Vaporesso Target 100.
If you’re rough on gear and want a more rugged single-18650 platform, consider the Geekvape S100 (Solo 2).

Limitations

The Drag M100S is good at what it is, but it doesn’t pretend to be everything.

  • Single-battery endurance is the bottleneck above mid-wattage use
  • Stock kit leans DL/RDL; tight MTL requires different hardware
  • Minor button/slider play can show up depending on unit

M100S vs Alternatives

Why choose these models

  • You want a compact single-battery kit that still feels “serious”
  • You value top-airflow leak resistance for daily carry
  • You like a simple lock switch and straightforward modes

Alternatives to consider

  • Vaporesso Target 100: same power class, different tank/coils and overall feel
  • Geekvape S100 (Solo 2): more rugged single-battery option for harsher use

Pro Tips

  • Treat 21700 as the “default” choice if you’re regularly above 55W; save 18650 for lighter days.
  • Use the lock slider before pocketing—make it automatic.
  • Start low on a fresh coil, then step up 2–3W at a time until flavor peaks.
  • Prime the coil thoroughly and give it a few minutes before the first real pulls.
  • Keep the top-fill gasket area clean; residue there is where mess begins.
  • If the vape feels harsh on TW15, drop wattage a few steps and open airflow slightly.
  • Wipe the drip tip and top-airflow ring daily; top airflow still collects condensation over time.
  • Use an external charger if you rotate multiple cells; it keeps your routine smoother.
  • Carry a spare bubble glass if this is your travel kit.

FAQs

What wattage works best with the included coils?

TW20 (0.2Ω) is happiest around 40–55W, and TW15 (0.15Ω) tends to shine around 55–70W. I got the cleanest flavor at roughly 48–52W on TW20 and 62–68W on TW15.

Does the UFORCE-L top airflow actually help with leaking?

In daily carry, it’s noticeably forgiving. I still saw light condensation over time, but I didn’t get the classic bottom-airflow “mystery puddle” problem.

Is the Drag M100S a good MTL device?

Not as a stock kit. You can tighten airflow, but the included tank/coils are tuned for DL/RDL style more than a true tight MTL pull.

What battery does it take?

It’s designed for a single external 18650 or 21700, and the kit includes an 18650 adapter.

About the Author: Chris Miller

Chris Miller is the lead reviewer and primary author at VapePicks. He coordinates the site’s hands-on testing process and writes the final verdicts that appear in each review. His background comes from long-term work in consumer electronics, where day-to-day reliability matters more than launch-day impressions. That approach carries into nicotine-device coverage, with a focus on build quality, device consistency, and the practical details that show up after a device has been carried and used for several days.

In testing, Chris concentrates on battery behavior and charging stability, especially signs like abnormal heat, fast drain, or uneven output. He also tracks leaking, condensate buildup, and mouthpiece hygiene in normal routines such as commuting, short work breaks, and longer evening sessions. When a device includes draw activation or button firing, he watches for misfires and inconsistent triggering. Flavor and throat hit notes are treated as subjective experience, recorded for context, and separated from health interpretation.

Chris works with the fixed VapePicks testing team, which includes a high-intensity tester for stress and heat checks, plus an everyday-carry tester who focuses on portability and pocket reliability. For safety context, VapePicks relies on established public guidance and a clinical advisor’s limited review of risk language, rather than personal medical recommendations.

VapePicks content is written for adults. Nicotine is highly addictive, and e-cigarettes are not for youth, pregnant individuals, or people who do not already use nicotine products.