TinyMight are a small Finnish outfit that built a cult following the hard way, by making a portable that actually drinks like a good desktop. No marketing machine, no flashy app, just a wooden-bodied convection vape that hits harder than things twice its size. People in Australia went looking for them because nothing else in a pocket gives you that much vapour that fast.
It’s a one-device brand, really, so this is less a range than a deep look at the one that matters.
The TinyMight 2
The TinyMight 2 is a pure on-demand convection portable. You hold the button, the heater fires, and hot air gets pulled through the bowl as you draw. Let go and it stops. That’s the whole trick, and it’s why the flavour is so clean and why the thing can produce genuinely silly clouds when you want them.
There are two ways to run it. On-demand mode is the headline: press, draw, release, repeat, and tune the intensity by how hard you pull and how long you hold. There’s also a session mode if you’d rather it hold a temperature and behave more like a normal vape. Most people buy it for the on-demand side and grow into the rest.
For flavour, sit it low, somewhere around 165-180°C, and take slow draws. For big visible clouds, push the dial up toward 200-210°C and pull harder. The clever part is you’re not really locked to a number, because in on-demand mode your draw does half the work. A light pull at a middling setting tastes one way, a hard pull at the same setting hits like a freight train.
Now the honest bits. It runs hot, and the mouthpiece and top can get warm if you’re chaining draws, so the glass stems aren’t just for looks. It’s loud on a hard pull, a proper rushing-air sound that you’ll either love or find a bit much in a quiet room. The single 18650 battery is removable, which is great for carrying a spare, but it means you’re handling lithium cells and a decent charger rather than just plugging in. Early units had a reputation for the odd reliability wobble, mostly heater-related, and the brand’s been better about sorting warranty claims than the forums sometimes suggest. And there’s a real knack to the button timing. Your first few sessions will be uneven. Give it a week and it becomes second nature.
Who suits it? Experienced users who already know what temperature they like and want more control, not less. If you’ve outgrown an easy portable and you’re chasing flavour and power, this is the one. If you want something your nan could pick up and use, it isn’t.
Living with one
Convection is kind to you here because the herb does most of the cooking, not the chamber, so gunk builds up slower than on a conduction vape. Even so, the glass stems want a regular soak in iso, the bowl screen needs a brush now and then, and you’ll want to keep the airpath clear so draws stay free. Treat the battery properly, use decent cells and a real charger, and don’t run them flat to nothing. Look after it and a TinyMight keeps performing for years.
If you’re cross-shopping, it sits in our portable vaporizers and dry herb vaporizers ranges, and the brands people usually weigh against it are Storz & Bickel for fuss-free reliability, DynaVap for battery-free simplicity, and Firefly for on-demand convection with a gentler temperament.
Which one suits you
Short version. There’s one device and it’s a cracker, but it’s a power user’s tool. Want the most vapour and flavour you can get from a pocket and happy to learn the timing: the TinyMight 2 is hard to beat. Want easy and forgiving over outright performance: a Mighty or a Firefly will make you happier.