Storz & Bickel Mighty+ Review: The Land Rover Defender of Vaporisers
"The Land Rover Defender of vaporisers."
The Mighty+ is the Land Rover Defender of vaporisers — boxy, utilitarian, and the safe choice I still recommend first after two years. Boring reliability beats exciting fragility when something's your daily driver.
- Score: 8.7/10
- Best for: First-time buyers who want to buy once, medical users needing consistent dosing, session sippers who prefer relaxed 10-15 minute sessions
- Skip if: You need true pocket portability, violent on-demand rips, or swappable batteries
- Price: £255.99
The all-rounder that does everything well and nothing badly. Boring, brilliant, unbeatable.
Pros
- Vapour quality is the benchmark — same smooth, consistent experience every single bowl, no technique required
- Built like a tank — PEEK plastic body survives drops, elbows, kitchen counter launches, and life in general
- Genuinely idiot-proof — hand it to a first-timer and they'll be producing clouds inside a minute
- USB-C fast charging with a 45W+ brick gets you 80% in roughly 40 minutes
- Twenty years of Storz & Bickel engineering means a mature ecosystem of accessories, knowledge and warranty support
Cons
- Cooling unit is a gunk magnet — expect a full teardown every 2-3 weeks with regular use
- Sealed battery means you're on a timer from day one — no swapping in fresh cells
- About as portable as a brick — jacket pockets only, no jeans, zero stealth
- ~60-second heat-up feels glacial next to the Venty's 20 seconds or TinyMight 2's instant-on
- £255.99 is real money when the XMAX V3 Pro does 85% of the job for £79.99
The Hook: The Land Rover Defender
Your mate pulls up in a Range Rover Sport. Glossy black, air suspension, looks like it was designed in a wind tunnel. Cost him seventy grand. Triple the power of anything he actually needs. And every time it goes in for a service, there's a new warning light, a new software update, a new reason to be slightly anxious about what might go wrong next.
Then the farmer next door rumbles past in a Defender that's older than you are. Mud on the wheel arches. Dents in the panels. A dog in the back that's seen more fields than most people see in a lifetime. That Defender's been starting every morning since 1987. It'll be starting every morning long after the Range Rover Sport's been traded in for something newer and shinier.
But when you actually need to get somewhere — through mud, through snow, through a farm track at 5am in February — the Defender's the one you trust.
That's the Mighty+. And the Range Rover Sport? That's the Venty. Same manufacturer. Same German engineering pedigree. Very different philosophies. The Venty is the flashy one — faster heat-up, triple the airflow, Bluetooth app control. Genuinely brilliant when it's working. But there's that constant low-level anxiety. Early batches had QC issues. Error codes pop up. You find yourself checking forums to see if your serial number is in a 'good' batch.
The Mighty+ is the Defender. Chunky. Boring. Been doing this for twenty years. Storz & Bickel's entire reputation distilled into a plastic rectangle that does one thing brilliantly: extract cannabinoids from plant matter and deliver them to your lungs without making you think. Without making you worry.
Vapour Quality 9.0/10
Let me be honest about the missing point: on-demand devices like the TinyMight 2 extract more initial flavour from those first low-temp draws, and the Venty moves significantly more air. If the category were 'Vapour Consistency,' this would be a 10. But it's Vapour Quality, and quality includes extraction power, airflow, and density — areas where other devices genuinely edge ahead. What earns the 9.0 is that nothing matches the Mighty+ for showing up the same way, every time, without asking anything of you. No technique. No learning curve. No combustion risk. Bowl after bowl.
Convection for flavour, conduction for consistency — and the cooling unit earns its keep by making everything feel gentler than it has any right to. First draw at 180°C: smooth, cool, flavourful. That classic S&B experience people have been banging on about for two decades.
This isn't a ripper. Let me be clear about that. If you're coming from massive bong hits and expecting to clear a bowl in two monster draws, the Mighty+ will disappoint you. This is a sipper. It's the difference between doing shots and nursing a pint. You're getting 5-12 draws over a 5-10 minute session, spread across 10-15 minutes of gentle toking. More joint than bong. More session than sprint.
The sweet spot is 0.15-0.2g packed loosely with a medium grind. That's enough contact with the chamber walls for the conduction element, enough airflow for convection to work its magic. Don't overthink the pack — 'load it but don't pack tight' is the universal advice, and it's accurate. The Mighty+ is forgiving.
At 180-185°C, the flavour stays bright and terpy through the first few draws, then settles into that fuller-bodied middle section before you step up the temperature to finish extraction. I usually cruise at 180°C, step to 190°C halfway through, then boost to 200°C for the last couple of hits. By then the terps are mostly gone and you're just squeezing out the last cannabinoids, but that's fine — the first half of the bowl is where the magic lives.
The Strain Test
Two strains. Two very different profiles. The Defender doesn't care what you load. It just gets on with it.
Farm Gas (Aurora Pedanios T27) — Indica
The Flower: Proper Aurora medical-grade (Pedanios 27/1), ~27% THC. Dense, sticky, frosty. Here's what surprised me: half the internet calls this myrcene-heavy, but the Aurora factsheet tells a different story. It's limonene-dominant (31%) with caryophyllene (22%) and trans-nerolidol (10%) rounding things out. Diesel and citrus up front, peppery warmth beneath. Check the COA, not the wiki summaries.
The Pack: 0.15g loosely ground, no capsule, cold load.
Low Temp (175°C): Immediate clouds. The limonene hits first — bright, sour-citrus, with a fuel note that tells you this is a Gas strain before you've even looked at the name. Five smooth draws. The cooling unit keeps everything silk-smooth.
Mid Temp (185°C): Caryophyllene comes forward — peppery, warm, savoury. That sour-citrus deepens into something richer. Four-five draws, density increasing. Effects settling in properly.
High Temp (200°C): Sweet fruit-sherbet notes emerge from underneath the diesel as the nerolidol activates. Two, three hits before the ABV turns dark brown. Total session: 12 draws over 12-15 minutes.
Farm Gas through the Mighty+ is exactly what medical users need. The hybrid heating extracts everything across the temperature range without combustion risk. Sustained delivery across 12 draws — no spike-and-crash, just steady absorption. ABV comes out thoroughly extracted.
MAC (Miracle Alien Cookies) — Hybrid (Sativa-Leaning)
The Flower: Alien Cookies × Colombian × Starfighter. 20-23% THC. Limonene-dominant but completely different to Farm Gas: where Farm Gas is diesel-citrus, MAC is creamy citrus with a floral edge and a diesel backend that sneaks up on you. Dense, frosty, slightly purple. The strain your mate brings back from Amsterdam and won't stop talking about.
The Pack: 0.18g medium grind, loose. No capsule.
Low Temp (170°C): This is where MAC earns its name. Creamy, vanilla-sweet, bright orange-peel citrus on top. By draw three, floral Earl Grey tea notes develop underneath. The Mighty+ at low temps with MAC is genuinely one of the best flavour experiences I've had from a session vape.
Mid Temp (185°C): Caryophyllene arrives — peppery spice cutting through the cream. Citrus shifts from bright orange to deeper marmalade. This is the sweet spot. Effects balanced: cerebral uplift without couch-lock, warm body calm that doesn't knock you sideways. Five draws, each thicker than the last.
High Temp (200°C): The diesel backend shows itself. Earthy, funky cookie genetics underneath all that cream. Three draws to finish. Vapour's denser but terps are fading.
The Verdict: Where Farm Gas is heavy and medicinal, MAC is complex and layered — and the Mighty+ doesn't flatten any of it. You get time to notice each terpene shifting as temperature climbs. 11 draws over 12 minutes. Two very different strains, same reliable extraction. The Defender doesn't care what fuel you put in. It just drives.
Design & Build (The 'Disaster' Story) 9/10
I knocked my Mighty+ off the kitchen counter while making tea. Classic Dennis move. Reached for the kettle, elbow caught the edge of the vape, and I watched it tumble in slow motion onto the tile floor.
Picked it up. Turned it on. Still worked. Not a scratch.
This thing is built to survive your lifestyle. And it does. The body is PEEK plastic — polyether ether ketone, the same high-performance thermoplastic they use in medical devices and aerospace. The vapour path is entirely PEEK too: no plastic taste, no off-gassing. Medical-grade engineering that happens to look like Fisher-Price. At 242g and 140 × 80 × 30mm, it's chunky but purposeful — every millimetre of that bulk serves a function. The extra girth houses the dual-battery pack and that oversized cooling unit, which is why the vapour comes out as smooth as it does.
Sarah calls it 'the brick.' She's not wrong. It looks like something a nurse would hand you in a hospital corridor. But you're not babying it. You're not worrying about scratches. It's a tool. It does a job. It doesn't ask to be admired.
Compared to the Venty's sleeker profile or the PAX Plus's Apple-like minimalism, the Mighty+ makes zero concessions to aesthetics. And that's actually part of the appeal — you use it like a kitchen appliance, not a luxury gadget.
The cooling unit clicks on with a satisfying snap. The OLED screen is bright and readable in any light, showing current and target temps without needing to squint. Two buttons handle everything: up and down. No touchscreen, no swipe gestures, no app required for basic operation. It vibrates when it hits temperature, which matters more than you'd think — you can load it up, set it down, and walk away until it buzzes.
What people don't mention enough is how the Mighty+ feels after a year of daily use. The rubberised grip doesn't degrade. The buttons don't get mushy. The screen doesn't develop dead pixels. The cooling unit latch doesn't loosen. Two years into mine and the only visible wear is a slight discolouration on the chamber rim from heat cycling — cosmetic, not functional. Everything says 'German engineering by people who've actually used vaporisers.' Your mate with the wooden TinyMight 2 will take the piss. Let them. Their vape needs technique and care; yours needs nothing but a charge.
Battery & Charging (The IT Guy Check) 8/10
Real-world numbers: 6-8 bowls at my usual temps (180-190°C). If you're hammering it at 210°C with long sessions, closer to 4-5. Light, gentle sessions at 175°C, you might stretch to 10. An eleven-hour Lord of the Rings extended-edition marathon (Sarah was away, don't judge me) required two charges.
Here's where it gets important: the USB-C charging is brilliant, but there's a catch. With a proper 45W+ USB-C PD brick, you're looking at just over an hour from empty to full — some people report 80% in about 40 minutes. With a standard phone charger? Four hours. Actually slower than the old barrel-port charger on the original Mighty.
If you're buying a Mighty+, budget for a decent fast charger or make sure you're using one you already own. Without it, you've technically downgraded your charging experience. With it, you've got genuine rapid charging that makes battery anxiety almost irrelevant.
One feature I use constantly is the Superbooster — double-tap the power button and you get an instant +15°C boost for 90 seconds. Triple-tap for another +15°C. It's perfect for finishing bowls or when you want to end a session strong. Max boost takes you to 210°C regardless of starting point.
Now, the elephant in the room: sealed battery. This is the thing that makes people hesitate. You can't pop in fresh 18650s like you can with a TinyMight 2. When the battery eventually degrades — and it will, because that's what lithium cells do — you're looking at an RMA or a DIY replacement that voids your warranty. You're on a timer from day one.
In practice? Most people get years of solid use before battery degradation becomes noticeable. The sealed battery is the trade-off you make for a simpler, more water-resistant design. For daily use, you charge it overnight like a phone. For multi-day trips, you bring a power bank. It's not ideal. But it's not the dealbreaker the forum threads make it sound like either.
Ease of Use 9/10
Turn it on. Set your temperature. Wait about a minute. Draw.
That's it. That's the whole process.
There's no technique to master, no learning curve to climb, no risk of combusting because you held a button wrong. The Mighty+ is idiot-proof in the best possible way.
The interface is two buttons. Up, down, that's your lot. No app required (though one exists if you want it). The screen shows your current temp and target temp. When it vibrates, you're ready. Start sipping.
Loading is equally simple: grind your herb to medium-fine, pour 0.15-0.2g into the chamber or a dosing capsule, light tamp if you want, done. Don't overthink the pack — the Mighty+ is forgiving. It doesn't need perfect technique to deliver.
Temperature stepping is intuitive. Start at 175°C, click up to 185°C after a few draws, boost to 200°C+ at the end. Or just set it to 185°C and leave it there. Both approaches work. The Mighty+ doesn't punish you for being lazy. It also handles concentrates in a pinch — steel mesh pad, max temp, small dab. Not a dab rig replacement, but it works.
This is the vape I hand to first-timers. This is the vape I'd give to my mum if she needed it for her arthritis. It asks nothing of you except patience and the ability to press a button.
Cleaning & Maintenance (The 'Gunk' Confession) 5/10
Right, here's where we get properly honest.
The Mighty+ cooling unit is a gunk magnet. After about 20 bowls, you're looking at a sticky brown maze of reclaim that needs dealing with, and dealing with it is not fun.
I've lost an O-ring down the sink drain during a cleaning session. Classic Dennis moment. Stood there watching it disappear into the plumbing like a very small, very expensive rubber band.
Everything accumulates in the cooling unit. The little maze where vapour snakes through, the screens, the corners around the O-rings — it all gets coated in sticky tar that starts golden and turns properly brown if you ignore it. After 5-10 bowls you'll see the first brown lines appear but it's still fine. By 15-20 bowls the draw resistance increases and the flavour gets heavier. Push past 30 bowls and you're doing a proper teardown whether you want to or not.
The process itself is straightforward if tedious: pop off the cooling unit, separate all the little pieces, soak in isopropyl alcohol — some people warm it gently for stubborn buildup — then use cotton swabs, brushes and toothpicks to excavate the reclaim from every corner. Reassemble. Try not to lose any O-rings down the drain.
Here's the trick that changed my life: the hot Q-tip method. Immediately after a session while everything's still hot, pop open the cooling unit and swab the insides with dry cotton buds. The reclaim wipes off like butter when it's warm. Do this religiously and you'll cut your deep-cleaning frequency in half.
For the oven: brush it out after every bowl. Seriously. Get into the habit. Dump the ABV, brush the screen, move on. If you do this religiously, you'll extend the time between proper CU teardowns. The ceramic coating on the Mighty+ chamber helps — it stains less visibly than the old aluminium version.
Cleaning is the price you pay for that cooling unit magic — and it's a real price. Here's the thing people don't tell you: dosing capsules don't keep the device much cleaner. They help with the oven, sure, but the cooling unit still gets gunked because that's where the vapour condenses. Capsules are convenience, not a cleaning solution.
One last thing: keep spare cooling units. Rotate them. Use one while the other soaks. Your life becomes significantly easier.
Portability 6.5/10
Let's not pretend: the Mighty+ is not a pocket vape.
It fits in a jacket pocket. It fits in a bag. It fits in the kind of cargo shorts your dad wears on holiday. But it's not slipping into your jeans and disappearing. At 235g it's chunky. It's obvious. It's a brick.
For home use? Irrelevant. You're not carrying it anywhere.
For the commute or a night out? It's doable, but you're planning around it rather than forgetting it's there.
For festivals or travel? It works, but you're packing a case and treating it like the £255.99 piece of kit it is.
Stealth is non-existent. The vapour is thick and lingers. The device itself looks like medical equipment. Nobody's mistaking this for a vape pen or a USB stick. If discretion matters, the Crafty+ exists for exactly that reason. Or the ArGo if you want to disappear entirely.
How I Actually Use This
My default setup is 185°C, sometimes stepping to 190°C halfway through, with 0.15-0.2g loosely ground and no capsule. Sessions run 12-15 minutes across 5-12 draws depending on how slowly I'm sipping.
I reach for it most nights. Pain management sessions. This is my daily driver — roughly 60% of my total vape usage. I load it up around 8pm, usually get through 2-3 bowls, then leave it on the kitchen counter for the next morning's session. It's the device that gets used when it matters, not the novelty device that gets rotated out.
When I don't reach for it: if I'm leaving the house, the Crafty+ lives in my backpack — smaller, more discreet, less obvious. The Mighty+ goes out occasionally, but if I'm genuinely mobile (commute, errands, going out out), the Crafty+ is the move. For weekend flavour sessions, the TinyMight 2 comes out when I'm deliberately chasing terps and have time to fiddle with technique. It hits differently at low temps, and that matters when you're actually paying attention.
The honest cleaning reality: I should clean the cooling unit every 20-30 bowls. I actually do it every 30-40 bowls when the draw resistance gets annoying enough to force my hand. The hot Q-tip method between deep cleans helps. I rotate between two cooling units, which makes the faff more bearable. Yes, I've definitely hit the point where I can taste the reclaim and still used it another few sessions because I couldn't be bothered with disassembly. We're all human.
I use this daily. Multiple bowls. This isn't aspirational writing — this is the device I have used every single day for two years except during the one week I was genuinely ill and wasn't vaping anything.
Medical Use Notes
I'm not a doctor. I'm a bloke with chronic pain and ADHD who's been using cannabis medicinally for years now. This is my experience, not medical advice. If you're considering medical cannabis, talk to a prescribing clinic — not a vaporiser review.
For Pain Management: The session style is exactly what sustained pain relief needs. You're not getting one enormous hit and then a cliff drop in effects. You're getting 10-15 minutes of gentle, consistent cannabinoid delivery across 5-12 draws. That works for pain. The body absorbs it gradually. The effect is more stable than you'd get from a quick rip on a ripper device. For daily medical use, boring reliability beats exciting fragility every single time.
For ADHD: Low-temp microdosing is possible (175°C, small pack, 2-3 draws). It works. But that's not what I use it for — my main medical use is pain. If ADHD microdosing was primary, I'd reach for something with faster heat-up and on-demand capability.
Session Timing: First draw to noticeable pain relief: 3-5 minutes. Duration: 2-3 hours depending on strain and tolerance. Load at 8pm, session until 8:15, relief through to bedtime.
The Medical User's Concern: When something is your daily medical device, reliability matters more than novelty. Same experience every time. No firmware updates, no app bugs, no error codes (touch wood). The cleaning burden IS harder when you're fatigued from pain — keep spare cooling units and rotate, so you're never doing a full teardown when you're hurting.
Value for Money 8/10
£255.99 for a portable vaporiser. That's real money. You could buy an XMAX V3 Pro for £79.99 and get 85% of the experience. You could buy a Solo 2 MAX for £128.99 and get arguably better flavour with easier cleaning. You could save up a bit more and get a Venty with better airflow and faster heat-up.
But here's the thing: the Mighty+ has twenty years of Storz & Bickel reputation behind it. Not twenty years of this exact model, obviously, but twenty years of the company making medical-grade vaporisers that work. That's worth something.
When you buy a Mighty+, you're buying into an ecosystem refined over decades. The warranty is solid. The accessories are mature. The resale value holds. The troubleshooting knowledge base is extensive. You're not pioneering anything; you're joining a very large club of people who've already figured out all the tricks.
Would I pay £255.99 again? Yes. Have I recommended it to friends? Yes — four of them tried mine and bought their own. Is it the best value in vaporisers? No. But 'best value' and 'safest choice' aren't the same thing. The Mighty+ is the safe choice, and for a lot of people, that's exactly why they buy it.
Score Breakdown
| Category | Score | One-Line Summary |
|---|---|---|
| Vapour Quality | 9.0/10 | On-demand devices extract harder and the Venty moves more air — but nothing matches this for consistency |
| Design & Build | 9/10 | Survives anything you throw at it (or drop on it), PEEK plastic is medical-grade |
| Battery & Charging | 8/10 | 6-8 bowls per charge, fast charging is brilliant with the right brick |
| Ease of Use | 9/10 | Two buttons, zero learning curve, first-timer approved |
| Cleaning & Maintenance | 5/10 | The cooling unit is a full-time job nobody applied for |
| Portability | 6.5/10 | Jacket pocket at best, zero stealth, the brick nickname is earned |
| Value for Money | 8/10 | Not the cheapest, but the 'safe money' in a market full of gambles |
| Overall | 8.7/10 | Category average is 7.8 — the extra point reflects that vapour quality and ease of use matter more than portability for a home session vape. The cleaning score is what keeps this from a 9. |
Vs the Competition
| Category | Mighty+ | Venty |
|---|---|---|
| Overall | 8.7/10 | 9.0/10 |
| Vapour Quality | 9.0/10 | 9.5/10 |
| Price | £255.99 | £304.99 |
| Heat-up | ~60s | ~20s |
Same manufacturer, radically different philosophy. Triple the airflow, 20-second heat-up, Bluetooth app control — but £50 more, more QC concerns, and more forum-checking anxiety. The Mighty+ just works. That difference compounds over years.
Full comparison → · Compare all specs →
| Category | Mighty+ | TinyMight 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Overall | 8.7/10 | 9.0/10 |
| Vapour Quality | 9.0/10 | 9.5/10 |
| Price | £255.99 | £299.99 |
| Ease of Use | 9/10 | 7.5/10 |
Different tools entirely. The Mighty+ sips across 10-15 minutes; the TinyMight 2 rips through a bowl in 1-2 hits. The TinyMight 2 hits harder with swappable batteries; the Mighty+ is smoother and idiot-proof. Most people who own both use the Mighty+ more often.
Full comparison → · Compare all specs →
| Category | Mighty+ | Crafty+ |
|---|---|---|
| Overall | 8.7/10 | 8.0/10 |
| Vapour Quality | 9.0/10 | 9.0/10 |
| Price | £255.99 | £186.99 |
| Portability | 6.5/10 | 8.0/10 |
Same heating system, smaller body, smaller battery (3-4 bowls vs 6-8). The Crafty+ is the portable compromise; the Mighty+ is the home daily driver. You wouldn't regret either — they're aimed at different use cases.
Full comparison → · Compare all specs →
| Category | Mighty+ | Solo 3 v2 |
|---|---|---|
| Overall | 8.7/10 | 9.2/10 |
| Vapour Quality | 9.0/10 | 9.5/10 |
| Price | £255.99 | £217.99 |
| Cleaning | 5.0/10 | 9.5/10 |
The Solo 3 heats in 25 seconds with a pure glass vapour path that's a doddle to clean. Flavour purists will argue it edges ahead at low temps. But the Mighty+ is more forgiving, produces denser clouds, and doesn't shatter when your clumsy mates get involved. £38 separates them.
Full comparison → · Compare all specs →
Vs AirVape Legacy Pro 2 (£179)
AirVape's hybrid response to the Mighty+'s session-king crown. £77 less, with a removable 18650 battery, an on-demand mode the Mighty+ doesn't offer, wireless charging, and 1-degree temp control. The Legacy Pro 2 wins on flexibility, feature spread, and long-term battery economics; the Mighty+ wins on thoroughness, durability, and zero-friction operation. If you want one vape that just works forever, Mighty+. If you enjoy tweaking and want a removable cell, Legacy Pro 2.
The Verdict (The Bookend)
Two years in, I still reach for the Mighty+ most nights.
The Defender doesn't have air suspension. It doesn't have a touchscreen infotainment system. It doesn't have adaptive cruise control or lane-keeping assist. It's a boxy thing that looks mildly surprised to still be starting after all these years.
But it's still in that barn. Still doing the job. Still the one the farmer reaches for at 5am when the sheep need moving.
The Mighty+ is the same. Boring. Reliable. The benchmark.
My mate Dave's been through five Mighty+ units in two years — not because he's clumsy, just error code lottery. Every single one got replaced under warranty within a week. Every single replacement worked perfectly until it didn't. That's not a great look for S&B quality control, and I won't pretend otherwise. But Dave's still using a Mighty+. He tried a TinyMight 2 for a month and came back. 'Too much faff,' he said. 'I just want to press a button and vape.'
That's the Mighty+ in one sentence. You just want to press a button and vape.
Some things don't need to be exciting. They just need to work.
FAQ
Ready to bring the Mighty+ home?
£359.99 £255.99 · with code DENNIS5: £243.19
Shop Mighty+ →Worth Grabbing With It
- Filling Set for 40 Dosing Capsules — pre-load bowls for on-the-go convenience, keeps oven cleaner
- Spare Cooling Unit — rotate between two units so you're never doing a teardown when you need a session
- Wear & Tear Set — O-rings, screens, replacement parts you'll eventually need
- Mighty+ Case — protects it in bags and during travel
Use code DENNIS5 at checkout for 5% off any vaporiser.


