With all the great gear out there, pinpointing聽the five products we鈥檙e most excited about can feel sisyphean: as soon as we narrow the list聽down, a whole slew of cool new stuff comes along.聽But our editors scoured the Outdoor Retailer trade-show floor in Salt Lake City to do just that. Here, we bring you our favorite equipment聽for next winter, including聽an uber-comfortable helmet to a souped-up backcountry communication聽device.
Crescent Moon Eva All-Foam Snowshoe ($149)

Snowshoes have been around for thousands of years,聽and in all聽that time聽their basic design hasn't聽changed much. That's聽why we're intrigued by the聽unique聽all-foam ones from Boulder-based Crescent Moon.聽The Eva is extremely light and portable:聽the company touts it as the love child of an Adidas running shoe and a Blizzak snow tire. The body's made from聽dual-density EVA鈥攖hink: the stuff in聽running shoe midsoles鈥攚hile the outsole uses a rougher composite for spikes聽to add traction on snow and ice. And while cutting weight often means removing material, that鈥檚 not the case here.聽The 1.4-pound聽shoe's foam keeps things light while maintaining a full, stable platform.聽Rocker at the tip and tail provide an effortless float聽when walking and even聽running.聽After a while, we forgot we were wearing them at all.聽
Smith Quantum Helmet ($300)

For the past three seasons, I've skied in one helmet and one helmet only: the Smith Vantage. Its fantastic fit, low profile, and feathery weight make it, in my (totally subjective) opinion, the best snowsports lid money can buy. Or at least it was until I tested the new Quantum, which is to the Vantage what a human is to a chimp.
Like its predecessor, the Quantum is built around Koroyd, a honeycomb polymer designed to boost protection without adding weight. The profile's still sleek and the rim plays nice with almost every pair of goggles I've tried. But it's got some big upgrades over the Vantage, including a liner so plush it feels like a pillow cradling your head and two-tone panels on the shell made of harder plastic that add protection鈥攁nd look cool to boot. The Boa cinch system ensures a dialed fit (possibly the single most important factor to consider when buying a helmet), while the magnetic buckle on the chinstrap clasps and unclasps effortlessly with one gloved hand. When opened, the 22 vents dump heat as effectively as cracking a window. I've logged 10 days in the Quantum so far this season and can officially say it's replaced my old, beat-up Vantage. Bravo to Smith for elevating a great design into a near perfect one.聽
GoTenna Mesh ($200)

We gave the first generation goTenna鈥攁 Snickers-sized device that serves as an antenna for a聽phone in the backcountry, allowing users to send texts off the grid through long-wave radio signals, without cell towers鈥擥ear of the Show in 2014. It paired with any iOS or Android phone via Bluetooth and, in addition to texting, could send GPS coordinates and navigate using downloadable maps. The Achilles heel of that first-generation device: its signal could be blocked by large physical obstacles, so it didn't work well in mountains, canyons, or around tall buildings. This cut the tool's effective range down to about five miles.
Enter the Mesh. It has the same basic technology as its predecessor, but now with a farther聽range: it can聽send a signal up to twice as far as the original by teaming up with other Meshes to create a network. And unlike an overtaxed cell network, the more people using goTenna Mesh, the better it gets.聽Plus, it's waterproof, unlike the original.聽
Patagonia PowSlayer Jacket聽($600)

Patagonia is聽known for its聽environmental activism. Take its聽Yulex wetsuits, which are built from tree rubber instead of petroleum-based neoprene,聽and the brand鈥檚 聽program, which repairs聽or recycles聽beat-up gear.
This year, it's rethought what happens to the waste created by ski shells. Instead of using new materials, Patagonia is now building聽its top-end Pow Slayer jackets with a Gore-Tex that uses a recycled face fabric. That fabric comes聽from scraps of discarded nylon聽that were melted down and turned into new yarns. Patagonia says that the Pow Slayer kit, plus its Pluma jacket that also uses the recycled material, will聽upcycle 3,245 pounds of industrial waste next season when the apparel launches.聽
Other upgrades include fewer聽seams, simpler聽pockets, and an improved cut聽that makes it's much easier to replace a torn panel. The bottom line? Patagonia wants this to be a piece you can use and abuse for years.聽
Fritschi Tecton 12 Binding ($550)

The holy grail for ski-binding makers? A binding with the power and nuance of a downhill model that's easy to use and light enough聽for the ups. No one's made the perfect one yet, but they're getting closer. Last year, Marker released arguably the top contender yet, the Kingpin, which has a tech toe-piece and an alpine-like, step-in heel for more security on the descents. This year,聽Fritschi answers with the Tecton 12: it uses similar technology, but weighs 550 grams less. It's also got a new safety release in the toe鈥攖he connecting pins that hold the boots in hinge sideways鈥攄esigned to release your boot in a crash聽and not before.聽