this post was submitted on 16 Jan 2026
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No, of course not. Paying $80 for a regular deck that could break in a week is silly. Skateboarding companies need to get with the times and produce more durable decks. Only then higher prices are fair.
On that note, check out these kape decks: https://kapeskateboards.com/. I've had the chance to try one from a fellow skater at the park yesterday and I'm amazed at how similar they feel. Great pop, strong as an ox, doesn't chip. The guy who I used it from was pretty much pro skill-wise, and he was nothing but enthusiastic about them too. Unfortunately they only come in 8.25 inch width for now as that is the most sold size apparently; understandable from a startup point of view. I've just mailed them asking whether they will increase size availability someday.
Edit: already got an answer :O
I've heard that name a few times this past year. I wonder how it compares to Powell-Peralta's "Flight Decks", Deluxe Distribution's "DBX", or Santa Cruz's "VX".
I went to Kape's website, and it looks like their boards are a composite of foam and fiberglass, which is an entirely different direction than the epoxy glues for Flight Decks and VXs.
The price is similar enough that it might be worth a try. They are only charging $25 shipping to America.
I've had two Powell-Peralta flight decks and now using a Decathlon carbon fiber deck. The kape decks seem to be better as they have all the benefits but also don't chip! Carbon fiber is a game changer towards not easily snapping a deck, but when skating predominantly on rougher surfaces, then the chipping detracts from the carbon fiber benefits.