| Management number | 235541611 | Release Date | 2026/07/02 | List Price | $209.99 | Model Number | 235541611 | ||
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The 2027 Atomic Bent Decode is a brand-new progressive park ski from the Bent family, built for creative skiers who want to push the boundaries of freestyle while still having an all-mountain ski underneath them. With a directional shape and a park-tuned rocker profile, it's something different in the freestyle category.
Building a park ski that's also a real all-mountain tool is a smart move. The Bent Decode has a directional shape rather than a true twin tip, which means it skis the rest of the mountain a lot better than a typical park ski while still letting you spin, press, and play around in the park.
Intermediate to expert skiers who want a progressive park ski that can also handle the rest of the mountain. A great pick for park skiers who don't want to be locked into pure park use, or for creative all-mountain skiers who want a ski with a freestyle edge.
The HRZN 3D Park tip is the headline feature, taking the same beveled, 3D-contoured tip concept from Atomic's other HRZN skis but tuning it specifically for park use. The directional shape is the real story though: most park skis are full twin tips that sacrifice all-mountain performance for switch riding, but the Decode strikes a different balance. You can still spin, press, and ski switch, but the ski feels much more composed when you leave the park. ABS CoreGuard reinforces the core against the abuse that park skiers put their gear through, with extra protection where impacts are most likely. The Light Woodcore keeps swing weight down for spins and tricks, and the Resist Edge Park is built to take more punishment than a standard edge. Dura Cap sidewalls add another layer of durability for long-term park use.
The directional shape means this isn't the move for skiers who ride switch as often as forward. True twin-tip park skiers should look at a more traditional park-specific ski.
Skis a bit short for its length thanks to the park rocker, so most park skiers can stay at their usual length, while skiers looking for more all-mountain stability can size up.
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