Every year the 国产吃瓜黑料 editors and other ski testers converge on , Utah, for a week of reviewing. The goal: Determine the best skis of the next聽year.
Rossignol Soul 7 HD W ($850)

Best For: Resort powder days.
The Test: One of the most popular (and award-winning) lines of skis ever made just got better. The latest iteration of the trusted 7 series features a redesigned honeycomb-polymer Air Tip that鈥檚 both lighter and more solidly integrated into the ski body. The result is all the playfulness you鈥檝e come to expect from this family, but with increased power and stability for times when you feel like opening it up. Augmented with a new super-fiber of basalt and carbon, the latest HD version earned nothing but praise from our women testers for its extra oomph. 鈥淚t still feels light and loose when you want to be nimble, but now you don鈥檛 get tossed around by crud,鈥 said one.聽
The Verdict: With a tip that can bash on through, this is a true all-mountain powder ski. 136/106/126
Armada Victa 97 Ti ($825)

Best For: Women who like to shred out West.
The Test: Armada built its reputation by crafting loose, surfy skis. The Victa surfs, too, but not at the expense of confidence-inspiring stability. The Ti stands for Titanal (a titanium alloy), which enhances the vibration control and straight-line chops of this lightweight wood-core ski. For a stick with a 97-millimeter waist, it鈥檚 surprisingly fun to carve turns whether you鈥檙e on-piste or off. And there鈥檚 enough rocker in the nose to float you through 90 percent of resort powder days. We found it easy and intuitive to pilot in all types of snow regardless of the terrain, thanks to a big sweet spot that lets you find your natural stance instead of forcing you forward or back.聽
The Verdict: If you love to explore the whole hill, this is your ticket. 130/97/120
Blizzard Rustler 11 ($840)

Best For: Cruising through聽powder and ripping hardpack.
The Test: Blizzard is known聽for building stable skis for hard-chargers. If you鈥檙e more the pow-surfing type (and you live out West), the brand-new Rustler 11 is your dream ride. Extra rocker in the tip and tail and a lower swing weight let you pivot and smear the ski in bottomless conditions. After a storm dumped 16 inches of fresh snow, we found it nearly as playful as an ultralight powder ski. Unlike one of those, though, the Rustler has guts. A multilayer wood core surrounded by Titanal and carbon means you can stomp聽it on hard snow with full confidence. 鈥淓ven though it鈥檚 easy to ski, it feels like it has limitless power,鈥 said a tester.
The Verdict: The most functional, adaptable powder ski we鈥檝e ever tested. 142/114/132
Dynastar Legend X96聽($800)

Best For: A one-ski quiver.
The Test:Testers praised the new Legend X96鈥檚 startlingly smooth edge hold. Credit for that goes to Dynastar鈥檚 race-bred sidewall construction, which lets the edges contour the terrain,聽absorbing chatter and boosting grip. It sounds like a subtle improvement, but that extra feel ratchets up confidence on hard snow. Off piste, a five-point sidecut (the tips and tails are nicely tapered) and just the right amount of rocker make for easy maneuvering in manky snow. On trails, a 17-meter turn radius lets you transition easily from big GS arcs to short swing turns as conditions demand. Even with no metal in the ski, there鈥檚 great edge hold all the way through the turn.聽
The Verdict: High versatility points. It鈥檚 both an all-mountain ski and a freeride tool. 132/96/112
Fischer RC4 Curv GT ($1,099 with bindings)

Best For: Lighting up the resort.
The Test: Carving turns used to be hard, but with the 16-meter radius of the wood-and-metal Curv, all you need to do is tip and rip. Balanced flex paired with a 129-millimeter-wide shovel means you just pressure your ankles to engage a turn. Then the geometry takes over and you settle into arc after effortless arc. Pick your model carefully, though: last year we tried this same ski equipped with a race plate underfoot, and all but the heaviest among us got bucked around the hill. Without the plate, it鈥檚 carving for all. 鈥淕et it up to speed and the Curv is stable enough to drive through a turn with power, but it鈥檚 just as easy to release, too,鈥 said a tester.
The Verdict: Pure frontside. Turn to this in hardpack when all other skis fail. 129/80/112
Head Kore 105 ($800)

Best For: Venturing all over the mountain in search of soft stuff.
The Test: Head calls the new Kore 105 鈥渟traight-up fat,鈥 but the first thing you notice is how light it is鈥攅ngineers discarded the traditional (and heavy) plastic top sheet in favor of a hardened polyester layer. That breakthrough is paired with graphene in the tip and tail, the honeycomb-like polymer聽Koroyd, and a core milled from feathery karuba wood. The resulting ski is so lightweight, we were nervous it would skitter at speed. It didn鈥檛. The Koroyd eats vibrations, making the Kore as stable as a far heftier ski. On the hill, it鈥檚 playful in tight trees, chutes, and bumps but still has bashing abilities when the morning powder becomes afternoon crud.聽
The Verdict: Look here if you spend 70 percent of your time off-trail. 135/105/125
V枚lkl VTA 108 ($825)

Best For: In-bounds, hike-to terrain, and powder touring.
The Test: We鈥檝e been fans of V枚lkl鈥檚 lightweight but powerful BMT line of touring skis for years. The problem? The premium carbon construction priced them out of reach. The new VTA line is the solution. Instead of a full-carbon construction, the German engineers added a carbon tip to the lightweight wood core. The dimensions are also new and conform to the gold standard for midwinter ski touring in the West: a fat rockered front end for floating on deep days, and a 108-millimeter waist that lets you roll the VTA on edge and carve. 鈥淩esort-worthy edge hold in a touring ski that doesn鈥檛 empty your bank account,鈥 said one rider.
The Verdict: Depending on聽the bindings, you鈥檝e got either a sidecountry rig or a long-haul touring setup. 141/108/124
Salomon XDR 84 Ti ($725)

Best For: Ripping groomers.
The Test: Nerding out over gear can become so consuming, it鈥檚 easy to lose sight of the fact that skiing is supposed to be fun. The new Salomon XDR line is a flat-out blast鈥攅specially on corduroy. The performance comes from C/FX, Salomon鈥檚 combo of carbon and a fiber woven from flax, of all things. That technology has an uncanny ability to allow the ski to hug the slope without sacrificing a lively, energetic feel. And when you match a 15-meter turn radius with an 84-millimeter platform underfoot, it requires zero effort to transition from groomers to softening corn. You don鈥檛 have to worry about punching too deep into the snowpack, either.聽
The Verdict: Quick for bumps and fat for buckle-deep powder, but best at arcing turns on tilled trails. 131/84/114
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