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Deck deals dominate: 25-27% off across shapes, sizes, and brands

From a 10.25 Heroin to a Girl twin-tip to a Cleaver at the steepest cut of the week, today's best drops are almost all decks. Here's what's worth your attention.

Today's price landscape is almost entirely decks, which isn't a bad thing. Across street widths, wide transition planks, and a couple of oddball shapes, there are legitimate deals sitting at 25% off or better. Most of these were already priced reasonably; the discounts push a handful into genuinely hard-to-ignore territory. Four stand out as worth talking about specifically, either because of the width, the shape, or the brand context.

Deck: Cleaver CLEAVER WILLY 8.25 — 27% off

The Cleaver CLEAVER WILLY 8.25 is the steepest cut in today's roundup, dropping from $75.00 to $55.00, a 27% reduction. That one extra percentage point over the pack might seem minor, but on a deck it means you're paying street-price for what is typically a premium-tier blank equivalent. Cleaver is a smaller brand without the catalog volume of Girl or Foundation, which usually means the per-deck price stays higher, not lower.

At 8.25 inches this is squarely in the most-skated width range, comfortable for technical street and functional enough for park. If you've been curious about the brand but hesitant to pay full price on a name you don't know well, $55 removes most of the risk. At that price point you're not gambling much on wood.

Deck: Girl Howard Rick's Full Court 8.25 Twin Tip — 25% off

The Girl Howard Rick's Full Court 8.25 Twin Tip Shape is down from $77.27 to $57.95. What makes this one worth calling out specifically is the twin-tip shape, which is still relatively uncommon in Girl's catalog. A symmetrical nose and tail means both ends respond identically, so switch skating and fakie tricks don't involve compensating for a shorter nose or a differently concaved tail. For skaters who put real effort into switch lines, that consistency matters.

Girl has a long-standing reputation for tight construction tolerances and consistent concave. The 8.25 width keeps this squarely in technical-street territory. The twin-tip detail isn't a gimmick here; it's a functional shape choice that suits a specific style of skating, and getting it at 25% off from a brand this established is a solid pickup.

Deck: Heroin Nolan Knock Off 10.25 — 25% off

The Heroin Nolan Knock Off 10.25 sits at $65.95 down from $87.93. Ten-point-two-five inches is genuinely wide, and Heroin is one of the few brands that builds decks specifically around that size range rather than just offering it as a catalog outlier. The brand has been associated with large, egg-shaped and wide-body shapes for years, so this isn't a novelty width bolted onto a standard shape; it's closer to the core of what they actually make.

Who needs this. Pool skaters, vert skaters, and big-footed street skaters who've stopped apologizing for wanting a platform they can actually stand on. At $65.95 for a 10.25 from a brand that treats wide decks seriously, this is priced below what you'd normally pay for a niche-format deck from a specialist label.

Deck: Arbor Pistola Spellbound 9.25 — 25% off

The Arbor Pistola Spellbound 9.25 comes down from $79.93 to $59.95. Arbor is primarily known for cruiser and longboard construction, which means their wide decks tend to be built with a slightly different wood composition philosophy than pure street brands. Whether that translates to feel is something skaters debate, but the construction tends to be durable and the shapes considered rather than arbitrary.

At 9.25 inches this is a transition and bowl deck first. The context note is accurate: it's overkill for ledges and rails, but in a bowl or on a mini ramp the extra width gives you real leverage on grinds and a planted feeling on landings. If you skate transition regularly and have been riding something narrower out of habit, $59.95 is a reasonable entry point to try a wider setup without committing full retail.

Deck: DGK Bruce Lee Dragon Lee Lenticular 8.0 — 25% off

The DGK Bruce Lee Dragon Lee Lenticular 8.0 drops from $87.93 to $65.95. The lenticular graphic format means the artwork shifts depending on viewing angle, which is either something you care about or you don't, but it does affect production cost, which is part of why the original $87.93 price was higher than a standard DGK deck. Getting a lenticular graphic deck at 25% off narrows that premium considerably.

The 8.0 width reads narrow in 2026, but there's a dedicated group of skaters who prefer it for the faster flip times and the lighter feel. DGK has been a consistent presence in street skating for a long time and their construction is straightforward and reliable. If 8.0 is your width and you want something that looks genuinely different from the standard screen-print, this is the obvious choice in today's deals.