Deck prices across a dozen brands just dropped 25% across the board
A wide sitewide deck discount is live right now. Here are the five most interesting picks, from Quasi's widest shape to a Sci-Fi Fantasy street sled.

Something unusual is happening this week: deck prices across a broad range of brands all fell exactly 25% at the same time. That kind of across-the-board move usually means a distributor or multi-brand shop is running a coordinated sale rather than individual brands clearing inventory, so it is worth acting on before it closes. The spread here goes from 7.75 inches up to 9.0, and the brand list is legitimately varied. Five picks stand out as worth your attention.
Decks: Quasi Freak Out 9.0 — 25% off
The Quasi Freak Out 9.0 is down to $60.95 from $81.27. Nine inches is a deliberate choice, not a default, and it signals something specific about how you skate. That much platform underfoot rewards ledge and transition skating where you want to feel planted, and it pairs well with wider trucks in the 159 to 169mm range. Quasi as a brand has built a reputation for consistent concave and quality Canadian maple construction since coming up out of Columbus, Ohio, and their shapes tend to run true to width without feeling bloated.
If you are already skating something in the 8.75-plus range and have been waiting on price, this is a straightforward buy at $60.95. If you are curious about going wider and want to try it without committing full retail, this sale price removes most of the financial risk.
Decks: Sci-Fi Fantasy Lay Rat 8.0 — 25% off
The Sci-Fi Fantasy Lay Rat 8.0 drops to $54.95 from $73.27. Sci-Fi Fantasy is Jerry Hsu's brand, which matters if you care about the editorial direction behind a company. The graphics and team reflect a specific, considered aesthetic, and the brand has maintained credibility in a crowded market by staying small and focused. At 8.0 inches, this is a street-oriented width, tight enough for technical flatground and stair skating, responsive under your feet for flip tricks without extra board to drag through the rotation.
The $54.95 price point is also on the lower end of this entire sale, which makes it the easiest entry if you want to try the brand without spending what you would on a Quasi or There deck from the same batch. Eight inches is not a novelty width, it is a legitimate choice for skaters who prioritize snap and board feel over stability.
Decks: There Pinson Master Poe 8.5 — 25% off
The There Pinson Master Poe 8.5 comes in at $63.95 against an original price of $85.27, which puts it at the top of the price range in this sale. There is a brand that has attracted serious attention since its founding, with a roster that includes some genuinely creative skateboarding, and their decks have a following for consistent construction and reliable concave. The 8.5-inch width is broadly useful, comfortable for street skating without being restrictive, and works fine for anyone who has drifted toward mid-to-wide shapes over the past few years.
The higher sale price here compared to the rest of the batch reflects There's slightly higher baseline MSRP, not a weaker deal. You are still getting exactly 25% off. If you have been riding There already, this is the obvious pick. If you have not, it is a reasonable time to find out what the fuss is about.
Decks: Chocolate Perez Flacos 7.75 — 25% off
The Chocolate Perez Flacos 7.75 is $57.95, down from $77.27. Seven and three-quarter inches is the narrowest deck in this entire sale, and it is worth calling out specifically because that width has largely fallen out of fashion at the mainstream level, which means it now functions almost as a niche preference. Skaters who grew up on narrower boards in the early 2000s, or who skate a very technical street style with emphasis on foot precision and quick rotations, tend to return to this range eventually. Chocolate has been around long enough to have deep roots in exactly that kind of skating.
This is not a deck for everyone in 2026, but for the skater who already knows 7.75 is their width, finding it at $57.95 from a legacy brand like Chocolate is a genuine win. The Flacos graphic is also a pro model, which means you are getting brand backing and rider context behind the shape, not just a blank at a discount price.
Decks: Quasi Oriole 8.625 — 25% off
The Quasi Oriole 8.625 sits at $60.95, also down from $81.27. The 8.625 width is an interesting middle ground that does not get discussed as often as 8.5 or 8.75, and it suits skaters who find 8.5 slightly cramped but are not ready to commit to the full stability of 8.75 or wider. It is also a width that works well on transition, giving you enough surface to lock into grinds on coping without sacrificing too much agility.
Having two Quasi decks in the same sale at the same price is actually useful because it lets you compare shapes directly. The Freak Out at 9.0 is a clear statement width. The Oriole at 8.625 is more of an everyday mid-wide shape that fits a broader range of skating. Both are $60.95, and both reflect the same level of construction quality from the brand.