
PROS:
- Ergonomic design with raised and angled buttons
- 360-degree barrel rotation sensitivity
- Iconic Wacom flared grip design
- Accessible price point for a pro tool
CONS:
- Limited compatibility with Wacom drawing tablets
- No option for custom weight swapping
Digital drawing has matured to a point where the pen you use often defines the kind of work you’re capable of. Most tablets ship with a capable stylus included, and pressure sensitivity has become nearly standard. Where real differences emerge is in the finer details: tilt support, button placement, barrel thickness, and the nuanced control that separates a general sketching tool from something more professional.
Wacom knows this territory well, having refined its pen technology across decades of products. The Art Pen 2 is its latest attempt to push that nuance even further, reviving a feature from its predecessor that dedicated artists genuinely missed: 360-degree barrel rotation. It’s an accessory designed not for everyone, but for those who want their digital brushes to behave as closely as possible to the real thing.
Designer: Wacom
Aesthetics
The Art Pen 2 carries Wacom’s iconic flared grip design, widening toward the tip and tapering toward the back. It gives the pen more visual character than a plain cylinder, while the two raised side buttons, set at a slight angle, add a bit of intentional texture to an otherwise clean barrel. The shape looks distinctly professional without being flashy, which suits the kind of serious work it’s built for.


Unscrew the back half, and a small nib compartment is tucked inside, keeping replacement tips within arm’s reach during a session. It’s a detail borrowed from the Pro Pen 3 and one that makes swapping nibs far less disruptive mid-drawing. The pen comes in an all-black finish, which keeps things clean and consistent, and makes the angled buttons stand out just enough to locate them quickly by sight.

Ergonomics
The pen is well-balanced and feels substantial in the hand without being heavy. The wider barrel suits anyone who finds slimmer pens like the Pro Pen 3 a bit uncomfortable during long sessions, though that’s always a personal call. The three raised, angled buttons make accidental presses nearly impossible and are effortless to identify by feel, which matters when your eyes are glued to the canvas.


The flared shape does come with a trade-off. It won’t sit easily in most pen loop accessories or grip covers, and there’s no way to slim it down if the barrel feels too wide. That’s the opposite situation from the Pro Pen 3, where an aftermarket grip can always bulk things up. The Art Pen 2’s shape is fixed, and you work with it or find something else.
Performance
Pressure sensitivity sits at 8,192 levels with full tilt support, putting it on par with the best pens at any price. Accuracy and response are exactly what you’d expect from Wacom, meaning there’s nothing to second-guess. What sets the Art Pen 2 apart, though, is the 360-degree barrel rotation, which picks up precisely how much and in which direction the pen shaft is turned.


For tools like calligraphy brushes or natural-media simulations, barrel rotation is genuinely transformative. It’s worth noting, though, that it’s also a fairly niche feature and not many drawing apps currently support it. Casual users probably won’t miss it at all. Where it resonates most is as an upgrade path for those who owned and relied on the original Art Pen before it was discontinued.

Compatibility is currently limited to a specific set of devices: the Wacom MovinkPad Pro 14, select Cintiq models (DTK168, DTK246, DTH246), and three Intuos Pro variants (PTK470, PTK670, and PTK870). Wacom has said that support for additional Pro Pen 3-enabled devices will be added over time, but for now, buyers should double-check their tablet is on the list before committing.
Sustainability
Like most professional accessories, the Art Pen 2 is plastic and metal, with nothing notably sustainable about the materials themselves. There’s no recycled content or eco-conscious material choice to speak of. Packaging tells a different story, though. It’s minimal, plastic-free, and fully recyclable, which aligns with what Wacom has been doing across its more recent product releases. A small step, but a consistent one.

What does count in the pen’s favor is Wacom’s track record for longevity. The original Art Pen was in production and active support for close to 16 years, an almost unheard-of lifespan for a digital accessory. If the Art Pen 2 follows a similar path, the investment stretches well beyond what most accessories can promise, and that kind of durability is its own quiet form of sustainability.
Value
The barrel rotation feature does limit the Art Pen 2’s broader appeal. Plenty of artists won’t need it, and for those users, there’s still a reasonable case for sticking with the more standard Pro Pen 3. If rotation has never factored into your workflow, the Art Pen 2’s most distinctive selling point simply won’t move the needle for you, and that’s worth being honest about.

That said, there’s a hidden value worth considering. At $99.95, the Art Pen 2 is $30 cheaper than the Pro Pen 3, with nearly identical core performance and barrel rotation on top. For those who prefer a thicker grip, it also sidesteps the added cost of official grip accessories. As a package, it makes considerably more financial sense than it first appears.
Verdict
The Wacom Art Pen 2 is a well-considered accessory for a specific type of creative. It doesn’t try to replace the Pro Pen 3, and it’s clearly not aimed at casual sketchers. What it offers is a combination of pro-level pressure sensitivity, a comfortable and distinctive grip, and a rotation feature that no competing pen at this price comes close to matching.
The limited compatibility list is a real constraint, and Wacom should address it sooner rather than later. But for those drawing on a supported device, particularly the MovinkPad Pro 14, the Art Pen 2 is a genuinely valuable add-on that earns its asking price without much argument. Especially at $99.95, it delivers a kind of brush-like expressiveness through barrel rotation that no standard pen, regardless of price, can replicate.
