Pickup available at Boutique Adrénaline
Usually ready in 24 hours
Size chart
Quick Specs
| Rider Type | All-Mountain Powder Hound |
| Terrain | All-Mountain · Powder |
| Shape | Directional |
| Flex | 6 / 10 |
Product Description
Built for riders who want to float through powder lines and boost every sidehit without fighting a demanding board, the Rome Ravine is the directional all-mountain workhorse of the lineup. Free-the-Ride Camber delivers confident edge hold underfoot with surfy rocker float in the nose and tail, while Directional Diamond 3D nose shaping and Carbon HotRods add punch and agility wherever the mountain takes you. The go-to for versatile, playful riders who want performance without the commitment.
Product Details
| Rocker Type | Free-the-Ride Camber: traditional camber underfoot for power, pop and edge hold, combined with rocker in both the nose and tail for float in powder and catch-free riding in variable conditions |
| Flex | 6 / 10 (on Rome's Playful-to-Precise scale) |
| Shape | Directional with 7.5 mm taper and 1.5 cm setback stance location |
| Sidecut | Tri-Radial Sidecut: three-radius sidecut that blends carving precision at high speed with forgiveness at slower speeds |
| Laminates | Carbon HotRods: carbon-fiber longitudinal rods that add power, snap and responsiveness throughout the board |
| Base | SinterStrong Base: high-quality sintered base built for durability and speed, with strong wax absorption for all-condition riding |
| Additional Features | Directional Diamond 3D: three-dimensional nose shaping that adds torsional stiffness and all-mountain agility to the nose, unlocking versatile performance in variable conditions |
Ravine Snowboard 2027 FAQ
Who is this board for, and what level do I need to be?
The Ravine is built as a mellow, directional all-mountain board. It's aimed at intermediate to advanced riders who want to float in powder and boost sidehits without the demanding stiffness of stiffer all-mountain shapes. On the Ravine, the flex sits at 6 out of 10, leaning playful, so you get forgiving maneuverability at resort speeds while keeping enough structure to handle variable terrain.
Should I get a twin or a directional board?
The Ravine is built as a directional board with a three-dimensional nose shaping that tilts the nose up slightly. On the Ravine, this setup keeps your front end floating in powder and gives you solid response in variable conditions, but it's optimized for riding downhill with authority. If you want to ride switch or hit park, a twin might feel more balanced.
What's the difference between camber and rocker?
The Ravine uses Free-the-Ride Camber: camber underfoot for edge grip, plus rocker in the nose and tail. On the Ravine, this combo locks you in through turns while the rockers lift the tip and tail off the snow, so you float in powder and forgive small catches without sacrificing carve precision.
Is this board good for powder?
The Ravine is explicitly built to float in pow. It combines a directional diamond 3D nose, a 7.5 mm taper that widens the front, and rocker up front. On the Ravine, the terrain map rates it 9 out of 10 for powder. You'll stay planted on your back foot with far less leg burn on deep days, and the extra nose width keeps you from diving.
What do carbon stringers or carbon additives do for the ride?
The Ravine is built with carbon-fiber longitudinal rods, called Carbon HotRods, running tip-to-tail in the core. On the Ravine, these add pop and snap to your turns without adding weight, so you can butter and release energy quickly when you need it, especially on variable terrain or when you're driving the board hard.