That’s my impression too, The plastic BM has to be forced to do what Shark does so easily and effordlessly.
Maybe it’s not just the design to blame, Shark is structurally very very sound and well optimized while the BM has this plastic bucket -feel in it. L
To be clear, I have not flown any of this current generation of Blue Max ARFs/RTFs and know nothing about it. I flew one of Kaz's, it flew a lot like an Impact. In particular, it tracked much easier than any of the Sharks I have flown, and had appropriate amounts feedback in and out of corners. The Sharks I have flown have had almost no difference in the feel/feedback whether they were flying level, turning, etc and required constant attention in places where I would just normally let the airplane fly itself. Obviously, if you do that, it can perform very well, but it also would appear to demand constant intensive practice, which is out of the question for me.
I have flown various Impacts, Trivial Pursuits, Thundergazers, etc, and at least the IC versions I can do a good flight right from the first maneuvers. Electric, I have a different experience, the line tension is typically massively more but the control feedback is still light and the ratio of tension to control feel is so wildly off what I expect that I find them very difficult to fly precisely. The exception are Paul's airplanes - I flew one of the early Predators and it was perfectly reasonable, tracked well. moderate tension, moderate control feedback, perfectly harmonious. The IC Sharks I found flew better than the electric for similar reasons. Even the B-17 had reasonably harmonious/appropriate tension vs control feedback, but turned up 11 (or more....).
Note I am leaving out my own airplane for several reasons, one is that no one else has much reference, since only a few of them have been built, and obviously mine is set up with the way I think it should be done. I will also note that the reference standard for any current stunt airplane is the Imitation - which, with the smallest flaps selected, ALSO flies like a Shark for fairly obvious reasons.
I said it before, so I will keep digging the hole - the Sharks I have flown are kind of similar to a lot of elevator-only airplanes - sort of like a Skyray that pulls really hard. That's not a bad thing, necessarily, because I can usually absolutely drill maneuvers like the square 8 with the skyray after having not flown it for years. It does less good in other maneuvers that require more subtle adjustments, and those are where I had more trouble with the Shark, particularly the electric. At least with the IC versions, the engine was also doing something that added some feedback. The Skyray has other limitations that the Shark doesn't but the basic feel is very similar to me.
For better or worse round loops count the same 40 points as asquare 8 and you can't give up one for the other. In any case, no one has ever complained about, say, how an Impact corners, it was an immediate revolutionary change in how stunt is flown that "world" has only recently discovered.
Brett