Short answer: If you already love skating and want speed and glide on groomed slopes, Skiskates are worth it — they’re the fastest, most skate-like option in the short-ski family. They’re less forgiving than full Snowfeet in bad snow. Here’s the honest take, with real Reddit opinions.
Skiskates are ~44 cm mini skis — “skates for the ski slopes.” They strap to your regular snow boots and sit between tiny Snowfeet and longer Skiblades, giving more glide and top speed than Snowfeet while staying packable.
Short answer: Skaters and hockey players are the biggest fans; the recurring caveats are braking from speed and holding an edge in soft snow. Across r/skiboards, r/skiing and r/Rollerskating:
The honest caveats:
Threads: r/skiboards and r/skiing.
Short answer: The 44 cm is the most skate-like and easiest to carry; many riders consider sizing up for stability and soft snow. As u/Aggressive-Smell8634 (r/skiboards) put it: “I just bought 44cm but now I’m nervous after seeing everyone get 65s.” Go 44 for pure skating feel, 65 for more stability and light powder.
Short answer: Easy if you can skate or ski even a little — most riders are comfortable within 15–20 minutes. Stopping uses a hockey stop or heel brake, just like skis.
| Skiskates (44cm) | Snowfeet (33cm) | Ice skates | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Surface | Snow / slopes | Snow / slopes | Ice only |
| Top speed | Higher | Moderate | n/a on snow |
| Glide | More | Less | n/a |
| Best for | Speed & skating feel | Fun & control | Rinks |
Short answer: Skip them for deep powder, breakable crust and long flat cat-tracks. For powder and carving, go with Skiblades 99–120 instead.
For skaters who ride groomers and want speed in a backpack-sized package, Skiskates are a yes. Shop Skiskates → · Snowfeet vs Skiskates →