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Rome Ravine Pro 2024-2025 Snowboard Review

The Rome Ravine Select is now the Rome Ravine Pro

Detailed review of the Rome Ravine Pro snowboard 2024-2025, a bulldozer of a board, with a wide, shovel-esque nose tapering a little to a formidable tail.

  • Price: €600 / $600
  • Category: Freeride
  • Sizes: 152, 155, 158, 162, 166
  • Flex: 8/10
  • Shape: Directional
  • Profile: Setback Camber
  • 3D: Yes
  • Base: Sintered
  • New for 2024/25 season: Sort of

Why We Chose The Rome Ravine Pro: One of our favourite all-mountain boards of the last five years, souped up.

The Rome Ravine Select is now the Rome Ravine Pro. As both names suggest, this is a little-bit-special version of one of Rome’s best-loved chargers – only now it fits neatly into the brand’s uber-responsive line, alongside the Artifact Pro and the Agent Pro.

“It’s a bulldozer of a board, with a wide, shovel-esque nose tapering a little to a formidable tail”

Otherwise not much has changed, and that’s no bad thing, as anyone who has ridden the original Ravine will attest.

Who Is The Rome Ravine Pro For?

If you’re more interested in digging trenches than spinning to win, then the Ravine should have always been on your radar. For the ‘Pro’ version, with its additional stiffness, that’s even truer.

Considering its shape, the original is surprisingly good at getting the creative juices flowing – so if you step to the Pro version, you’ll be sacrificing some of that. However, what you lose in versatility and freestyle fun, you gain in sheer nerve-holding, boundary-pushing stability.

Shape, Profile and Sidecut

The shape of the Rome Ravine Pro is the first thing you’ll notice about it, even before you’ve made a turn. It’s a bulldozer of a board, with a wide, shovel-esque nose tapering a little to a formidable tail. As if to underline the point in permanent marker, a more standard silhouette has been incorporated into the graphic – essentially the opposite of Bullseye’s ‘let’s have a look at what you could have won!’ moment.

The nose on the Singular is a little fuller than most, and the tail is pretty much squared off, but you’ll only notice that when you’re in deep snow. On firmer ground, you get all the reliability of a fairly standard outline, albeit one with subtle ‘Bezier-curve’ sidecuts that you’ll appreciate when carving.

“You barely need to engage your brain to keep this one afloat, giving you more headspace to seek out the most slashable stashes”

The camber in the profile is set back, complementing the taper nicely in the powder. You barely need to engage your brain to keep this one afloat, giving you more headspace to plot your route and seek out the most slashable stashes. Oh, and that’s before you factor in the 3D shaping in the nose, which lifts the edges slightly at each side to give you even more float.

The waist width and sidecut are fairly run-of-the-mill, in a good way; there’s no volume shifting going on here. When you want to just blast around the piste, the Ravine Pro offers up a traditional carving experience complete with nimble edge changes.

Construction and Materials

It’s only when you look under the bonnet that the differences between the standard Ravine and the Pro version are revealed, so be sure to check both recipes to determine which is right for you.

The core is the first point of diversion; the half-paulownia, half-poplar split in the original has been changed to a two-to-one ratio in the Pro. That means it’s even lighter, without being any less strong or responsive. Then there’s the flax-based upgrades, which add extra dampening and durability. Plates made of this versatile natural fibre sit under each foot to reduce the chance of binding blowouts, and there’s more between the core and the sidewall to reduce chatter at high speeds.

“It’s lighter without being any less strong or responsive”

The angled carbon rods in the non-Pro version are present here too, but this time they’re wrapped in an additional layer of carbon for even more pop and response. The fact that they’re placed only in the tail means you get a little more play in the rest of the board.

Roundup

For boxers, turning pro may be the start of a journey that leads to lucrative paydays, invites to Riyadh and, eventually, sideshow rucks with abrasive YouTubers. For the Ravine, it means taking the best bits of a modern classic and tweaking them for the more demanding rider out there.

The result is something that won’t be for everyone, but is bound to be embraced by those it was designed to serve – and with a size range to catch all comers, we bet there’ll be more folks on the Ravine Pro this year than cells dislodged from Tyson Fury’s brain.

Pros:

  • As an enhanced version of an existing favourite, you know where you stand with the Ravine Pro
  • The lighter yet stiffer construction feels ‘premium’ right from the off

Cons:

  • There’s no getting around it – most riders will just be better off on the original rather than stepping up to the Pro
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