• NEVER RUN OUT OF AMMO AGAIN! -- Now you can finally dominate the battlefield with Ray Squad premium nerf gun foam toy bullets! This incredible mega pack that contains 300 high-quality foam bullets! At Ray Squad, we provide more different dart tips and colors such as green, red, orange, and glow in the dark! We will make sure that you never run out of ammunition again!
  • UNIVERSAL DESIGN FOR EVERY NERF GUN! – Our amazing toy pistol foam darts have the ideal dimensions (7.2 X 1.3cm) and are compatible with the Nerf N-Strike Elite Rampage/Retaliator Series Blasters and almost all of Nerf guns available! Rest assured that your Nerf pistol will never jam and will always have a full magazine!
  • SHOOT WITH UNPARALLELED PRECISION & ACCURACY! – We have implemented the advanced, patented Raytheon Tech™ technology to our elite foam bullets, adding more weight to the orange tip, thus providing you with extreme accuracy and maximum precision!
  • ENJOY SAFE & FUN BATTLES WITH YOUR FAMILY! – The Raytheon Toys tested and approved Nerf foam bullets are ideal for endless hours of battles due to their safe and innovative design! Feel the adrenaline rush while battling with your friends or children and enjoy the slam fire action!
  • SMASHING NERF FUN OR YOUR MONEY BACK! – We, believe that you and your children, deserve the most durable, accurate and fun Nerf shotgun foam bullets! That’s why we proudly back our premium product with a hassle-free 100% money back guarantee! Enjoy the best simulated combat experience 100% risk-free!

After a week these Raytheon Toys Soft Darts for Nerf N-Strike Series.... seem better than the original darts. The darts that came with one of our Nerf three shooters fall out before you can shoot them. These stay in. The Raytheon darts also seem more robust at first. Love the other reviews. As mentioned these may sting a little more, but I'm not really sure. My sons and I are having fund shooting each other all over the house.

These darts are way way way better than your average normal elite darts! Stiffer foam so there is less jamming. These work well in almost every nerf blaster! Now I will go over the pros and cons Pros: Shoots better Flies farther Hits harder Better price than normal elite darts Rarely jams Cons: Hurts a little more Sometimes if you use a flyweel blaster you need to pull the trigger way harder because of the stiff foam Caution: always wear eyegear when using these darts. All in all, these darts rock. 10/10 would recommend.

These darts are great! I think they're almost better than the name brand darts! They are of good consistency, slightly harder than the name brand but thats better because my 4 year old does not play gently with the darts, they get jammed or stepped on and all kinds of bent up but you can still use them. The name brand darts usually get bent/jammed once or twice and then you cant use them anymore because they don't hold their original shape as well as these do. I'm glad I went for the 300 pack because we took out around 100 right away and the rest are put aside for later. It's an exceptional product for the price and im glad we found these little gems before investing in the name brand darts again! Thank you!

So, while I consider us avid lovers of some serious Nerf gun action in this home of six, I am by no means an expert on all things Nerf. Therefore I would first like to thank the previous reviewers who let me know to take a chance in these! They are absolutely awesome! The first things I noticed about the darts upon receiving them is the quality and quantity for price are unbelievable! The Raytheon bullets are hands down better quality than Nerf. The foam is more dense, and less pliable than Nerf, meaning they are less likely to get squished or mangled. They retain their shape better, and recover their original shape easier. The rubber end cap is ever so slightly longer than Nerf's (which we like!) and also a touch stronger or harder. We also prefer this. The shape and density of the end cap provides for better speed and harder impact. We absolutely wholeheartedly endorse those aspects, lol! My just turned eight year old was adamant that his Zombie Apocalypse guns ONLY have the zombie darts in them. Despite Mommy explaining the tactical and logistical disadvantages to this thought process, he was determined that be the case. The other two brothers, myself, Daddy, and even his two year old sister were more than happy to capitalize on this idea and whoop up on him while frantically searching out only the green zombie bullets. We all VERY quickly discovered these were superior, left fabulous fun marks, irritated and pissed off everyone much quicker, and flew farther faster. Fast forward five days of owning these and infinite wars later, and he REFUSES to even acknowledge the existence of the zombie darts now! The boys sort through and preload their guns with "the darker orange, harder tipped ones." Before each fight, and prefer to never use the Nerf bullets again. We will be stocking up on additional sets of these for sure!!! Grateful for quality products, made affordable by great companies! We also have yet to have a tip one off or be pulled off by anyone (insert toddler and dogs names here...)

Word of Warning: This review is more a compliment of "data" and observations I have collected over the last five months. I am a avid nerfer "for lack of a less cheesy term" and have shot these darts through every conceivable action (type) of nerf "blaster"; including but not limited to a modified Longstrike, the Slingfire, the Hyperfire, the Stryfe (my personal favorite, and universally considered the best and most practical nerf blaster ever made), the Hammershot, the Strongarm, the Silentstrike (a nerf blowgun) even the air warriors Destiny (the only off brand nerf blaster I have ever purchased, and if you've ever fired one, you'd see why), and over a dozen others that aren't worth mentioning. In short, I was skeptical about buying these darts, but given the price, I tried them out figuring even if they fall apart after the third shot, it would still be worth it. I was amazed at the quality of the darts and their performance. In this review, I go over how the dart is designed and the quality of materials used, I explain how it relates to the performance, and I go over the price per dart. Through out the review, I am always comparing the dart to the nerf elite dart, which is standard with all nerf brand dart blaster, and is more or less the current standard for darts. Coincidently, they suck, nearly any design is superior to the elite dart. I literally tear these darts apart throughout my review to show the darts inside out. My opinion is completely based on what I have learned and experienced with both darts, being based almost entirely on data. Pictures: I apologize for the confusing order, the pictures uploaded wrong. First picture, I compare the raytheon toys dart head (orange) to an elite dart head (black) from the doomlands line. Raytheon has patented their head design which I talk about later. The second and third pictures show the difference in foam density. The white foam is from a nerf elite dart from the modulus line, and the blue foam is from a raytheon toys dart. Denser foam helps the dart keep its shape longer, makes it less susceptible to jamming, and creates a better air seal. The fourth and fifth pictures are showing the difference in dart length. This has minimal effect on performance, but is worth noting as it is one of the way to tell the darts apart when the elite dart is blue (more on that in the end). The final two pictures show the two part head stage of the two darts (raytheon and elite). It was difficult to split the actual head from the plug (for lack of better term) on the elite dart, but on the raytheon toys dart they separate relatively easily, even when the entire head is still connected to the foam. The plug alone on the raytheon toys dart is more aerodynamic than the head on it, resulting in really good accuracy; most notably through a blowgun. Although it improves performance to the dart, don't do it if your planning on firing the darts through flywheels, as the dart is too short for the wheels to grab. But when shot through spring powered nerf blasters, have at it. (Note: The body is the oldest part in my review. Most of it was written in September 2016 when I first bought the darts. I am leaving it almost entirely intact (even though parts of it are slightly off) because it shows how little my opinion of the darts has changed over five months of continuous use. (Continuous meaning 4-8 hours of nerf battles a week, with our formable arsenal).) There are three things that makes a nerf dart perform good, cost aside (I'll get back to that later); dart tip, foam, and adhesive to connect the two. The nerf elite darts set the par for the three. The foam on the nerf elite darts is solid at first but wears down over time. The glue on nerf elite darts is very solid and consistent. The head on nerf elite darts, however, is inherently flawed. There is a hole on the side that are supposed to act as air release holes when the dart makes contact providing cushioning so someone doesn't blow out an eye. However, this hole causes the dart to swerve off in a random direction after about twenty feet (due to air resistance). So its not the blaster thats inaccurate, its the dart. Now, nerf elite darts are currently retailing for twenty U.S. dollars for only 75 darts (price varying on when and where you get them). Thats over 26 cents per dart (which sounds reasonable till you think of it in terms of quarters, and what your getting). Which we all know, you have a 25% chance of loosing after the first "nerf gun fight." Now for Raytheon toys, that roughly same twenty dollars will get you 300 darts, (a 400% increase of darts, for the same amount of money). Now, first with the dart tip on the Raytheon darts. They are made of a very hard rubber, on the verge of plastic. However, it still has the dumb air release hole! So the accuracy is still comparable to that of nerf elite darts. However, the dart tip, and the whole dart in general, is heaver than nerf darts. So the grouping of nerf elite at twenty feet is about the same as the Raytheon dart at 40 feet. Simple inertia, if you don't understand it, just google it or talk to any seventh grader in science. The heavier dart tip, however will not affect the range. Although you will notice a slight decrease in muzzle velocity, the same amount of energy is being put into the dart (some more physics), so it will travel about the same range (if muzzle velocity or how hard the nerf blaster shoots is the issue, then just google "how to mod the nerf..(insert name of blaster here)..." and crank it up (the blaster). Velocity can be easily fixed, how accuracy relies on the dart entirely, and theres not much you can do). Some may like the heavier tip, others may not. I'm personally neutral. So in conclusion, the tip is heavy, still with a dumb hole, and hard (only a concern with little kids). Its not entire rubber, or entirely plastic, it's somewhere in between, so they hurt slightly more, but most people wouldn't be able to tell the difference. Due to the hardness of the rubber, it should be able to last longer than nerf elite darts. (Note: The dart head is the last part you have to worry about wearing out.) Next, the glue. It is awesome. I was expecting inconsistent glue due to cheap manufacturing. But this glue is great. It has a great seal and shoots through springers (spring powered nerf guns) like a dream. The glue is so good that it overcompensates for the weight and when shot through a springer has a higher muzzle velocity than nerf elite darts. Since the glue has such a good seal, it probably will hold together for a very long time. The glue, I would say three times better than expected. (Revision: I don't think there is any glue, the tip has this part that sticks out the back, that has these grooves. My theory is, these grooves act as o-rings ish, and seal the air. The tip is held in by melted foam, and friction. This, is what I'm assuming is the "Raytheon Tech," that they have recently started advertising and claimed to have patented. So probably no or very little glue, so even better. I am leaving up the original paragraph because that was my first impression, and it shows you how fantastic this design is. It took me firing these darts a good three months nonstop, to where I finally jammed two in a Slingfire (which was the blaster not the darts) and they were shredded, for me to figure this out. You can see this in the pictures. This groove system is also where most of the weight of the dart is.) Finally the foam. It is stiffer than nerf elite dart foam. Haven't had a jam yet. Seals good, and seems like it'll hold up a while. It is also part of the excellent seal. Stiff foam is also a major part of good flywheel performance. (Revision: Check out the pictures of the darts see the density of the foam, the raytheon toys is slightly denser (more foam, less air) than the elite darts, and it seems that raytheon does a better job melting the inner diameter foam of the dart of the foam than the nerf does on the elite darts. This seals the air better. It is also worth noting that the foam alone is almost entirely holding the dart head, which means it is strong enough to withstand considerable pressure, and still work great.) And for cost. Now, I bought 300 Raytheon darts for about 16 U.S. dollars. (Revision: At this date my prices of the Raytheon toys darts are slightly off, although they have fluctuated in price, they seem steady now around 19.99 dollars. Thats about 6.66 cents per dart.) That boils down to 5.34 cents per dart. About just over fifth the 26.67 cents per nerf dart. (75 elite darts for 20 dollars). Although, I have seen the price vary on these darts from 15-50 U.S. dollars per 300 Raytheon darts, whenever its under thirty dollars per 300, they're totally worth it. Now, for side notes, final thoughts, and gripes. First, the gripes. They are the same color as 90% of the other nerf elite darts out there. And they look so similar in design that you can't tell the difference until they're in your hand (or you have sorted through them enough to tell the difference in the shade of the head). That is a dumb idea. Most people don't care, but if you do, you will almost certainly get nerf elite darts mixed up with your Raytheon darts and vice versa. Different foam color options would be awesome and are one of the few places where raytheon falls short to its competitors. The darts are longer than elite darts, but they still go into nerf magazines fine and fire through any blaster fine. (Note: Occasionally the raytheon toys dart's head will get jammed up in a magazine while your loading it, mostly with the 18 dart strait mags, and curved or banana style magazines. This isn't a big deal and usually the problem fixes itself, and if it doesn't just tap it a few times. But this only happens only one out of thirty reloads, so you barely even notice it, and I haven't had it cause a jam, when firing). The added length may slightly increaser performance giving more surface area for the flywheels to grab on to, and it will seal on the back of springer chambers slightly better. So no issues. The other biggest problem is the dumb tips, which I explained earlier. Despite these slight flaws I would rate these Raytheon darts four stars and still use them even if they were the same price as elite darts, but their so much cheaper, so they're entitled to a solid five star rating (Nerf elite darts are three given they're the par; if they weren't I'd give them two). I would recommend them to anyone (modder or five year old) who owns a nerf blaster. Another small but probably highly appreciated touch to moms, is the darts come in individually wrapped sets of ten. So you don't have to give your kid 300 nerf darts at once, but you can give them about four packages, enough for a normal nerf war. And keep the rest hidden away, unopened till the kids lose the darts you gave them earlier. If you've read up to here, thanks, and please rate helpful. UPDATE: I am amazed with how well the darts held up over time. This shows they were built with high quality glue and foam. After a twenty person three hour war, and over a dozen fights around the house (we nerf seriously and often) they look like new. I have yet to experience a jam with them regardless of the gun (we shot them out of every type of nerf gun conceivable, including a blowgun which I'm sure breaks 100 fps) and they almost never jam. I had purchased some nerf elite darts around the same time as these and after two fights, well everyone knows how notorious elite dart foam is. So, recap, they stood the test of time beyond my expectation (again). Also, I got a comment about another, probably better, theory about the dart head design. He claims that the inaccuracy caused by the tip is caused by air displacement. If you want to read more on this just check out the comment section and I'm sure you'll find it. But, none the less these nerf darts are far more accurate than nerf elite darts, and are continuing to amaze me past my first impression. If you've read this far, you are truly awesome. I don't think I would of, thanks. P.S. In order to provide the best information in my review as possible, I want to be interactive with fellow customers. Please leave a comment on anything concerning my review you want; especially criticism. Please let me know if there is anything unclear, or that I need to further clarify. And I'd really appreciate it if you rated this helpful. Thank you. P.P.S. I am consider a video version of this review, if you like the idea leave a comment.

These dropped in price to ~$17, and is an unbeatable price for 300 darts, even for generics! On top of that, they are EXCELLENT in our NERF and off-brand dart guns! We've used generic darts before and can always tell that they aren't name-brand, but these work perfectly with no misfires. TOTALLY WORTH IT!

Individually packaged in 10's, this pack will refill your entire arsenal of Nerf blasters. This worked with every gun I owned except the dart tag blasters - they took a special shorter dart. Compared to the standard elite darts that come with the newer blasters (white/green/blue variety), these are much denser and sturdier. Without any modifications, using these darts over the standard ones will add several feet to your range, and will be much more accurate and reliable. I had the orange tip fall off one dart during my testing, but a dab of glue put it right back on - its attached to a small end cap that goes down into the dart, so no damage was done by the tip separating. They do also hit a tad bit harder as the orange tip is a harder, less flexible plastic. As a fun bonus, coming out of my more powerful blasters, these darts will often whistle while flying to their target, similar to the large 'Mega' series darts.

We opened 3 packages out of 30 so far. The first dart that was shot hit the target and the orange tip came off. The following 29 darts were just fine. I put a dab of glue & it was fixed. I wasn't concerned about the quality of them. I believe they are selling good quality nerf darts at an incredible price point. Honestly, I think they are better than the OE darts you can buy. Yes. My first dart fell apart. Still, I'm a realist. I won't let 1 dart foil the rating knowing that they are awesome darts. Buy the Raytheon Toys Nerf darts with full confidence!!!!

I put about 200 darts out of the 300 through some rigorous testing over the weekend during a family nerf war. The guns used were both used and brand new out of the box. For informational purposes the guns used were the following: - Triad EX-3 (new) - Jolt (new) - Modulus Mediator (new) - Stryfe (new) - StrongArm (used) - Raider CS-35 (used) - Recon CS-6 (used) - Maverick Rev-6 (used) I used standard NERF brand 6 and 12 capacity mags as well as one 35 capacity drum. During the test firing only two jammed during slam firing. With regular firing I had no issues with jamming. With regular nerf darts I rarely had jam tested both used and new factory nerf darts. I did not have an issues with ripped or torn darts, none of the darts lost the top. These darts flew 5 to 10 feet more than the nerf darts and they did hit a little harder due to the slightly harder plastic tip. I found these to be a little more accurate than the standard nerf darts, and I think this is due in part the the more rigid tip. For the price they are an excellent alternative to standard darts unless you need the softer nerf tip. (younger kids) I like that they hit a little harder than the normal darts. Besides that you may want to experiment with some other brands to see what works for you. We're an older crowd so the accuracy is a little more important to us.

Purchased for a NERF War. Darts were fired from about 60 different guns and performed acceptably for the price. We had no darts come unglued. However, 3 of the packs were crushed and unuseable. ***UPDATE*** - Customer service was outstanding and the crushed darts were more than taken care of. Darts perform well for the price and the company is willing to stand behind their product and provide exceptional service. I have ordered more darts and will continue to do so in the future.