I bought a Thrunite TN11. It is a thrower, easily fits in my front pocket, nice to have the optional extension tube. But the UI isn't what I like about the setup. If you are going to just keep it at one setting majority of the time, great. If not, I find the UI a bit clunky. I the holster is not very well made and I will be repairing the one I have and maybe later get a nice custom leather holster made for it as this is a nice light.
I've got the Thrunite Scorpion V2 w/turbohead which I think is probably the same beam, lux & lumens. I'm also impressed with the throw and lumens per size but the UI is it's achilles heal (as well as their **** poor customer service/honoring of warranty). However that being said, it is so close to being a really cool UI with an amazing beam.
Slightly off topic but wanted to throw this out there so some manufacturer could indeed make the best pocket thrower! As is, first bad thing about the scorpion is the UI is erratic, and breaks easily. Secondly, with the tail switch rotated all the way ccw, it is in "infinite" variable, (infinitely slow) mode where it crawls from 40 lumens up to about 600 in 1/2 and hour (exaggerating of course!) and then decreases. Next mode over is a firefly, then a strobe, then max and then an empty slot (I don't think it is suppossed to have that but it does.) For my purposes, the infinite variable is far to slow in its ramping to want to adjust; I just leave it at the lowest level which is about 40 lumens. The tail ring IS so easy and flip and rotate with your thumb with one hand while using the light, it has the potentional to be a really cool UI. As mine is, with the tail ring all the way right it is 40 lumens, then .5 lumens, then blank position, then strobe, then max and then blank. It is so easy to flip thru those but it is not easy to know how many modes you flipped thru. IF they were in a more intuitive order (IE low to high or high to low with no blanks) and if it wasn't so fragile, it would certainly be the most rocking light I know of. If for instance all the way ccw was .5l, then 4, then 40, then 200, then 700, then stop it'd be so simple in the dark to know if your light was coming on at .5 or 700 lumens - and you could change from one to the other in about 1/5th of a second (compared with say 10 seconds if they used their "infinite variable" mode).