[review]·2025.11.07

J skis Skibladezzz — Review

Overview

The Team Skibladezzz is a modern skiboard that channels a playful, park‑first personality ideal for freestyle riders and tight, quick turns. With its eye‑catching limited graphics and compact length it screams creative intent — pop, spins and inventive line choice. The short platform delivers instant maneuverability and razor‑sharp response, which riders will love for presses and switch landings. Note that many releases ship with bindings attached, and some of those bindings are non‑releasing or non‑traditional, so check the SKU details before purchase.

Construction & Key Specs

Construction centers on a full‑length Aspen wood core and a high‑speed sintered base with a factory tune. The key dimensions — 119/100/119 — tell the performance story: wide tip and tail add flotation and a larger contact patch on landings, while a 100 mm waist balances agility and edge hold. The 8.5 m sidecut radius gives very short, snappy turns. Weight (about 860 g per ski) makes spins and butters effortless. Rocker/camber numbers are not published; visually and in use it behaves like a twin‑tip with camber underfoot and early rise in tip/tail.

On‑Snow Performance

On snow the board feels lively, poppy and immensely forgiving: it excels at quick pivots, small radius turns and park features. The short 8.5 m radius encourages fast edge‑to‑edge transitions but also limits high‑speed tracking compared with longer skis. The 119‑100‑119 planing platform helps in softer snow and on landings, though it won’t replace a full‑length powder tool. On groomers it offers surprising edge grip for its size, but expect chatter and nervousness when you push speed beyond its comfort zone.

Comparisons & Alternatives

Compared to traditional skiboards and short twin‑tips, the Team Skibladezzz leans more modern and creative — focused on pop and trickability rather than big‑line speed. The 91 cm variant with a 104 mm waist doubles down on playfulness and will be even easier to spin, at the expense of stability. If you want a compact freestyle toy for booters, butters and urban lines this competes well with other micro twin‑tips; if you want all‑mountain versatility or long high‑speed carves, opt for a longer design.

Pros, Cons & Verdict

Pros include a lively, playful character, low weight, excellent pop and standout limited‑edition art. Drawbacks are limited high‑speed stability, the absence of published rocker/camber specs and potential issues with non‑releasing stock bindings on some bundles. Verdict: this is a brilliant choice for riders prioritizing park, playful piste laps and creative movement. If your days are dominated by speed, deep powder or long carves, consider a longer or more all‑mountain oriented ski instead.

[specs]2 lengths
lengthstap to switch
readout·99 cm
waist
100mm
same at all lengths
tip
119mm
same at all lengths
tail
119mm
same at all lengths
radius
8.5m
same at all lengths
weight / ski
860g
only this length
[position]242 / 837
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