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Decks across the board: 25% off at nearly every price tier right now

A wave of 25% deck discounts is live across multiple brands. Here are the five most interesting picks, from a DGK collab to a Heroin Razor Edge wide boy.

Every single deal in today's drop is a deck, and every single one is down 25%. That kind of uniform discount usually means a retailer is clearing inventory across the board, which is good news for anyone who's been riding the same setup longer than they'd like to admit. The prices range from $54.95 up to $65.95, so you're not choosing between deals so much as choosing between what you actually want to skate. A few of these are worth stopping on specifically, either because of the brand pedigree, the shape category, or the graphic context.

Deck: DGK Bruce Lee Dragon Lee Lenticular 8.25 — 25% off

The DGK Bruce Lee Dragon Lee Lenticular 8.25 is down to $65.95 from $87.93. DGK has been doing Bruce Lee collab graphics for years at this point, and the lenticular printing is the part that makes this one stand out. Lenticular graphics shift depending on the viewing angle, which is a production detail that costs more to execute and usually keeps prices high. Getting one at 25% off changes the math a bit.

The 8.25 width sits in a comfortable middle range for street skating. It's responsive enough for technical tricks without feeling squirrelly under bigger feet. If you're primarily a street skater and you want something that will also look interesting hanging on a wall after you've skated it to death, this is the one to consider.

Deck: Heroin Dawn of the Egg 9.4 Razor Edge — 25% off

The Heroin Dawn of The Egg 9.4 Razor Edge comes in at $63.95, down from $85.27. Heroin is a UK-based brand that has built a dedicated following around their Egg shapes and the Razor Edge construction, which refers to a milled edge profile that sharpens the sides of the deck for a more precise feel during grinds and slides. At 9.4 inches, this is clearly not a tech street setup.

Wide decks in this range are popular for transition, cruising, and anyone who runs larger trucks and bigger wheels. If you're skating bowls or pools, or you just prefer a planted feel with room to move your feet, 9.4 with a Razor Edge profile is a legitimate combination. The fact that it comes in under $64 makes it easier to justify as a dedicated transition setup or a second board.

Deck: Real Mason Volcano 8.38 — 25% off

The Real Mason Volcano 8.38 drops to $63.95 from $84.95. Real is one of the more consistently respected deck brands in the industry, known for their construction quality and the longevity of their maple. The Mason Volcano is a pro model, which means the shape and concave are dialed to a specific rider's preferences rather than a generic template.

The 8.38 width is a slightly awkward number that tends to attract skaters who've tried 8.25 and 8.5 and landed somewhere in between. It gives you a bit more platform than a standard street size without committing fully to the 8.5 camp. At this price, it's one of the better-value pro model decks in the current drop.

Deck: Welcome Spear 8.8 Son of Boline Shape — 25% off

The Welcome Spear 8.8 Son Of Boline Shape is $56.95, marked down from $75.93. Welcome is known for producing decks in non-standard shapes, and the Son of Boline is one of their recurring shapes with a directional feel and a nose and tail that aren't interchangeable. That matters if you skate with a clear front and back rather than a symmetrical twin setup.

At 8.8 inches, this sits in a range that suits skaters who want more surface area than a standard street deck but aren't ready to go full 9-plus. The directional shape also makes it a reasonable cruiser or transition board. Welcome's graphics tend to be distinctive, and the price at under $57 is hard to argue with for a shaped deck from a brand with this kind of catalog.

Deck: Quasi Drop Out 8.5 — 25% off

The Quasi Drop Out 8.5 lands at $56.95, down from $75.93. Quasi is a brand that sits in an interesting spot, respected in the street skating world and associated with a roster that tends toward creative, technical skating. The Drop Out is listed as a true twin shape, meaning the nose and tail geometry are identical, which makes it equally functional switch.

If you skate a lot of switch or nollie tricks, a true twin removes the variable of adapting to a different nose or tail pop. The 8.5 width is versatile enough for street and park without feeling oversized. At under $57 for a Quasi twin, this is a solid deal if the brand is on your radar.