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(Photo: Inga Hendrickson and Kevin Zansler)
2022 Winter Buyer鈥檚 Guide

The Best Snowboards of 2022

Noteworthy rigs for everything from pow to hardpack

Published: 
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(Photo: Inga Hendrickson and Kevin Zansler)

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In years past, our snowboard tests have been parties with a purpose. We鈥檇 establish shredquarters at a ski resort, invite talented testers for a few days, then distill the resulting feedback and data to bring you the best snowboards on the market. Alas, much like plentiful powder and petite park boards, parties and pandemics don鈥檛 mix. So this year, we improvised. From January through May, a squad of Wasatch locals checked out boards from a makeshift HQ: our test director鈥檚 overflowing garage. They held on to decks for weeks at a time, riding them in conditions ranging from dreamy to nightmarish and everything in between. When they were done checking out a board, they submitted thorough, detailed reviews. Did we miss the camaraderie of a full-fledged test? You bet. But we鈥檙e confident that this year鈥檚 format enabled riders to push boards to their limits and identify their idiosyncrasies over an entire season.

K2 Excavator ($550)

(Photo: Courtesy K2)

Last year, K2鈥檚 Alchemist won our Gear of the Year award. This year, the brand鈥檚 wunderkind snowboard designer, J. Stone, has done it again with the Excavator, a contemporary carver that crushes corduroy, surfs slush, slashes through bottomless powder, and puts fun first. Genetically, the Excavator and Alchemist might be brothers. Both decks sport camber underfoot, rockered noses, bamboo backbones, speedy carbon-infused bases, and notched tails bolstered with carbon stringers for stability and snap. But the unisex Excavator is a fat 鈥渧olume-shifted鈥 shape, meaning it鈥檚 designed to be ridden several centimeters shorter than your everyday all-mountain board. It鈥檚 also softer and surfier than the torpedolike Alchemist. On snow, K2鈥檚 back-to-back winners ride more like distant cousins.

Still, veteran testers couldn鈥檛 help but compare the easy-riding Excavator with the hard-charging Alchemist. Consensus was that the Excavator outfloats the Alchemist, at least at lower speeds, and that it鈥檚 much less demanding, and thus more approachable for intermediates. On the flip side, testers warned that the Excavator was less confidence-inspiring when straightlining, with one all-mountain rider explaining, 鈥淚t鈥檚 more turner than burner.鈥 He continued, 鈥淏etween the torsional flexibility, the dual-radius sidecut, and the carbon tail,聽 the Excavator lives up to its name, gouging signatures on groomers sure to feed the ego from the chairlift.鈥

One initially skeptical tester deemed the Excavator 鈥渟table for its size and shape鈥 and said it was an absolute charger that served up maneuverability in tight trees. While some considered the Excavator a shape they鈥檇 take from the quiver only for deep snow, fresh groomers, or spring slush, he claimed, 鈥淚鈥檇 ride this thing every day of the week.鈥 For those choosing between K2鈥檚 winning creations, a board hoarder offered some unhelpful advice: 鈥淚f the Alchemist is heavy metal, the Excavator is psychedelic surf rock鈥攖here鈥檚 a time and place for both on your shred playlist.鈥


Salomon HPS Louif Paradis ($650)

(Photo: Courtesy Salomon)

Best Alternative Powder

Quebecois pro Louif Paradis is best known for his surgical, stylish evisceration of the streets. However, he鈥檚 grown fond of Hokkaido, where storms regularly bury handrails, powder boards are standard issue, and bails don鈥檛 typically beget bruises and broken bones. Enter the HPS Louif Paradis, one of few boards built for both worlds. 鈥淒eep days, groomer days, even jib days are all fair game on this deck,鈥 commented one talented tester. A collaboration with Wolle Nyvelt (fellow Salomon pro, shaper, and owner of 脛smo Pow Surfers), the HPS Louif Paradis is a minimally tapered directional twin. It鈥檚 stiffer and wider than Paradis鈥檚 go-to street stick, the Villain, and has 20 millimeters of setback, all of which helps boost float in deep snow. But the HPS also adopts the Villain鈥檚 precise, turn-on-a-dime sidecut and poppy, reliable, rail-ready profile, which consists of a rockered nose and tail, camber at the inserts, and an elevated flat section between the feet. According to our testers, the resulting board rips on hardpack and fosters a creative freestyle approach in powder.


Capita Mega Merc ($750)

(Photo: Courtesy Capita)

Best All-Mountain

The adage 鈥淚f it ain鈥檛 broke, don鈥檛 fix it鈥 doesn鈥檛 fly in Capita鈥檚 Austrian HQ, the world鈥檚 first snowboard factory running on 100 percent clean energy. Since the original Mercury popped up on our radar in 2016, it鈥檚 been one of our favorite all-mountain boards thanks to its park-to-pow prowess, hardpack-hammering camber, and buoyant, easy-turning rocker at the nose and tail. For the Mega Merc, Capita鈥檚 mechanics kept those proven specs but upgraded the engine. Instead of a traditional wood core strengthened by bamboo rods, designers swapped in a new, high-tech, lightweight thermopolymer material. By integrating strong post-consumer recycled plastic strips into a hybrid wood core and reinforcing that with response-enhancing carbon tape, Capita was able to retain strength while milling out distinctive channels that slash 150 grams from the weight of the standard Merc. According to a Snowbird stalwart, the futuristic tech also supplies impressive response. 鈥淭he Mega Merc is a lively all-mountain masterpiece,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 was pretty blown away by how light and snappy this board is,鈥 admitted another, although he noted that freeriders may crave a stiffer, damper ride. 鈥淔or resort rippers who ride everything but don鈥檛 want to spend the extra money on a powder-specific board,鈥 he said, 鈥渢he Mega Merc is the answer.鈥

From Winter 2022 Buyer鈥檚 Guide Lead Photo: Inga Hendrickson and Kevin Zansler

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