19/03/2026
Every wakeboarder does this after a session.
You sit there replaying moments in your head.
Was that jump actually bigger?
Did I land that trick clean?
Was that my best run?
Most riders leave the water with a feeling.
Not the answers.
We’re working on changing that.
Which one do you always wonder about after riding?
👇
11/03/2026
Progress in wakeboarding isn’t always landing a new trick.
Sometimes it’s:
Stronger cuts
Cleaner attempts
More control
Most riders are improving way more than they realise.
But we’re curious…
What actually makes you feel like you’re progressing?
Vote in the poll 👇
28/02/2026
Most riders leave the water with a feeling.
“That felt bigger.”
“I rode better today.”
“I think I finally cleaned that up.”
But feelings fade.
Progress hits different when you can actually see what changed — what landed, what improved, what’s getting more consistent.
We’re not trying to turn riding into data.
We just want to make progression visible.
Because once you can see it… you can chase it.
First 500 riders soon.
16/02/2026
Tracking doesn’t make you better.
It makes improvement visible.
We’ve spent more time removing features than adding them — because progression should feel simple.
We’re building this carefully.
09/02/2026
Progress doesn’t always look like a new trick.
Most of it happens quietly — smoother landings, more confidence, sessions that just feel better than the last one.
The problem?
If you can’t see it, it’s hard to trust it… and even harder to repeat it.
We’re spending a lot of time behind the scenes figuring out how to show real progression without overcomplicating the ride.
More soon. We’re taking our time for a reason.
15/01/2026
Most riders feel like they’re improving.
Very few can actually prove it.
Landing more tricks isn’t the same as progressing.
Feeling smoother doesn’t always mean you’re better.
Real improvement shows up in patterns:
Consistency
Control
What changes session to session
If you care about getting better this season, this is worth saving and coming back to before your next set.
08/01/2026
Most riders don’t stall because they lack effort.
They stall because they lack feedback.
Same lake.
Same speed.
Same set… over and over again.
Real progression comes from knowing what actually changed, why it worked, and what to adjust next.
If you’re riding this summer, this one’s worth saving.