How to Diagnose Your Dog’s Specific Prey Drive Style in Dog Frisbee 🥏🐕

Every frisbee dog has prey drive—but how that drive shows up is unique. Diagnosing your dog’s specific drive style helps you stop guessing and start training with intention. Instead of asking, “Why is my dog doing this?” you’ll know exactly what they need from you.

This guide will help you identify your dog’s prey drive pattern and how to work with it on the field.


Step 1: Observe Before You Try to Fix Anything

Diagnosis starts with observation—not correction.

Watch your dog before the throw, during the chase, and after the catch.

Ask yourself:

Patterns tell the truth.


The Five Common Prey Drive Styles

Most dogs fit primarily into one main style, with traits from others. Identify the dominant one first.


🔥 The Explosive Chaser

You’ll notice:

What this means:
Your dog’s drive spikes too fast. They need impulse control without loss of excitement.

Best focus:


👁️ The Stalker / Laser-Focus Dog

You’ll notice:

What this means:
Your dog thrives on clarity and precision.

Best focus:


🦷 The Possessor

You’ll notice:

What this means:
The catch ends the game for them—right now.

Best focus:


🌪️ The Overstimulated Spinner

You’ll notice:

What this means:
Arousal is too high for learning or clean execution.

Best focus:


🧭 The Motion-Dependent Dog

You’ll notice:

What this means:
Movement has become the only cue.

Best focus:


Step 2: Identify the “Leak” in the Drive

Every drive style has a leak—the moment where things fall apart.

Common leaks include:

Fix the leak—not the entire dog.


Step 3: Confirm Your Diagnosis Under Pressure

Drive style shows up strongest when:

If the same behaviors appear in those moments, your diagnosis is correct.


Step 4: Adjust the Game, Not the Dog

Your dog’s drive is not a flaw—it’s a feature.

When you:

You unlock better performance without suppressing instinct.


Final Thought: Drive Is Communication

Prey drive is your dog telling you how they want to play.

When you diagnose their style, you stop correcting symptoms and start building clarity. The disc becomes predictable, the game becomes fair, and your dog gains confidence in every catch.