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Size chart
Quick Specs
| Rider Type | Park Rat |
| Terrain | Park |
| Shape | True Twin |
| Flex | 2 / 10 (Soft) |
| Width | Regular · Wide |
| Binding Mount Pattern | 4X2 |
Product Description
The Kickback is the gateway board for riders ready to learn rails, lock presses and huck their first jumps without blowing the budget. Rock Out Camber keeps the catch-free forgiveness coming while still delivering enough pop to send you off lips with confidence. A Popster-reinforced Aspen core and Royal Rubber Pads round out a park-ready package built to take a beating all season long.
Product Details
| Rocker Type | Rock Out Camber: traditional camber between the feet for pop and edge hold, with early rocker at the tip and tail for floatation and forgiveness on entry and exit. Locks into rails, presses easily, and provides a playful, catch-free feel. |
| Flex | 2 / 10 (Soft). 20% softer than the Sleepwalker, optimized for easy pressing, buttering and beginner-to-intermediate park progression. |
| Shape | True Twin: perfectly symmetrical tip and tail in length, width and flex. Designed for riding equally well in both directions, natural for switch tricks and rail riding. |
| Sidecut | EQ Rad (Equalizer Rad): Salomon's asymmetrical-feel sidecut for park riding, balancing agility and edge hold for precise maneuvers on jumps, rails and transition. |
| Core | Aspen: lightweight Salomon wood core species with a lively, responsive feel and good natural pop · Popster: dual-density insert system with denser material at the insert zones for increased pop and durability, integrated directly into the core. FSC Certified Wood Core. |
| Laminates | BIAX MD Fiberglass: biaxial medium-density fiberglass with fibers running at 45° angles for torsional flex and edge-to-edge responsiveness. Lighter and more forgiving than the HD version, suited to the soft flex target of this board. |
| Sidewalls | ABS Sidewalls: standard Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene construction for durable, impact-resistant protection along the board's perimeter. |
| Rails | Royal Rubber Pads: rubber pads placed underfoot at the binding inserts, dampening vibrations from underfoot, protecting against sidewall blowouts and improving the binding interface feel. |
| Base | Extruded Base: polyethylene base produced by extrusion. Easy to repair, lower maintenance than sintered, well-matched to entry and budget park riding. Standard Stone Finish and Freestyle Edge Bevels (slightly detuned for forgiving landings and smooth rail presses). |
| Additional Features | Natural Wax factory application · Set Back 0 mm (true center stance) |
| Binding Compatibility | 4X2 insert pattern: 4 rows of 2 inserts, compatible with all standard bindings. |
Kickback Snowboard 2027 FAQ
Who is this board for, and what level do I need to be?
The Kickback is built as a true twin with a soft flex, so it's aimed at freestyle and park riders from beginner through intermediate. On the Kickback, the softer feel means you can press tricks, lock onto rails and obstacles, and get forgiving pop off small jumps without needing perfect technique. It's the board that rewards having fun over sending it hard.
Should I get a twin or a directional board?
This is a true twin, which means both ends are identical. On the Kickback, that symmetry lets you ride switch effortlessly in the park, so you can flow through features either direction and practice tricks off both feet without thinking about board shape. It's simpler, more playful, and perfect for learning.
How stiff should my board be, and what does flex actually change on snow?
The Kickback has a soft flex that's 20% softer than similar models in the lineup. On the Kickback, that means the board bends easily underfoot, so you press and manipulate it with less effort, which is great for jibbing and building tricks. You stay in control at slower speeds, and you won't get punished for imperfect landings. The tradeoff is less high-speed stability if you push speed.
What's the difference between camber and rocker?
The Kickback uses Rock Out Camber, which is a traditional arched profile that sits higher in the middle. On the Kickback, that arch provides snap and pop when you ollie, plus it keeps the board engaged with the snow under load. You get responsive edge catch on rails and crisp turns, which is why freestyle parks use camber instead of rocker's flatter, more forgiving feel.
Do I need a wide board?
The Kickback comes in both regular and wide widths. Wide sizes (155W, 158W) have a waist width around 26 cm versus 25 cm in regular. On the Kickback, go wide if you wear a larger boot size (roughly US 10+) to prevent your toes or heels from dragging off the edge when you carve or lock in. Regular riders stay closer to the edge on a regular width, which keeps you more locked to the board.