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Vishnu Wet (2025)

$
799.95
Top Women's Park Skis 2025
Built for the streets, rails, and every butter pad in between, this ski is all about flex, flow, and creativity. With a soft feel and symmetrical shape, it rewards style over stiffness and rewards expression at every turn.

Lengths:

171
177
183
189

Style:

Park

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Skill:

Advanced

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Rocker Profile:

Rocker/Camber/Rocker

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Design:

Multiple

Colors:

Black
Blue
Brown
Green
Orange
Off-White

Materials:

Bamboo (core)
Poplar (core)

Highlights:

Ultra-soft for easy presses
Ideal for butters and manuals
Spins and swaps like a dream

The 2025 Vishnu Wet remains a cult-classic park ski for good reason—it’s unapologetically soft, fully symmetrical, and engineered for riders who spend more time in the air or on rails than they do carving. This ski isn’t trying to be versatile, directional, or all-mountain capable. It knows exactly what it is: a purebred jib stick for skiers who live for butters, nose blocks, swaps, presses, and style-forward park laps.

The Wet features a bamboo-poplar core wrapped in a full sidewall construction, with symmetrical dimensions and a nearly full twin rocker profile. Camber underfoot gives it just enough snap to ollie and load up for tricks, while the rocker and super soft flex let it press and butter like few skis can. It’s one of the loosest feeling skis on the market, and that’s entirely the point—it invites you to get weird, lean into style, and smear turns instead of carving them.

On snow, the Wet feels incredibly playful and maneuverable at low to moderate speeds. It’s lightweight and easy to pivot, with a flex profile that practically begs you to lean back and butter the tips off every knuckle. If you ski with a centered stance, you’ll unlock its full potential—but if you try to drive it from the front like a directional ski, you’ll quickly realize it’s not interested. Landings feel plush and forgiving, especially on rails and smaller jumps, though you’ll want to be centered and confident on big booters—it’s not a ski that thrives on support and stiffness.

Compared to other freestyle skis like the ON3P Magnus or Armada ARV 96, the Vishnu Wet is significantly softer and looser. It trades power and edge grip for creativity and flex. It’s closer to a skate deck than a carving tool—and for park skiers focused on flat-ground tricks, swaps, and spontaneous expression, that’s exactly what makes it so appealing.

The 2025 version stays true to form, with minor tweaks to durability and construction refinement, but no major overhaul. Vishnu knows their audience, and they don’t mess with what works. It’s not the ski for everyone—but if you’re the skier who spends all day sessioning features, greasing rails, and getting buttery in the side hits, the Wet continues to deliver everything you’re after: flex, feel, and an open invitation to get creative.

Specs
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