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Bataleon Disaster snowboard 20261 / 3
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Bataleon

Bataleon Disaster snowboard 2026

$399.20$499.00

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At a Glance

Terrain

Freestyle

Ability Level

Beginner
Intermediate
Advanced
Expert

Description

The Disaster combines cutting-edge technology with rugged construction, creating a jib deck that conquers any challenge. Its relaxed camber and soft flex ensure a laid-back ride on the approach and effortless pressing. With contemporary nose and tail kicks, it delivers a skate-like feel that’s second to none.

Shape True Twin
Flex 4/10
Profile 3BT (Triple Base Technology) with Low Camber + SideKick
Core 50/50 Paulownia and Poplar
Base Hyper Glide S (sintered)
Best For Jibbing / freestyle park — soft, pressable, skate-like feel
Size
144
148
151
154
157
153W
156W

Details

Type
Snowboard
Vendor
Bataleon
SKU
8720701623590

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PTO ReviewPark

Bataleon Disaster

By PTO Ski Team, Based on manufacturer data, industry tests, and rider feedback · Multiple on-snow sessions on this board · Various test sites

Groomers3Jibbing10Jumps7Versati.8Skill L.3Powder2
Groomers3
Jibbing10
Jumps7
Versatility8
Skill Level3
Powder2

The take

Bataleon's dedicated jib weapon — flex 2/10, Jib 3BT, and built to take abuse. Snowboarding Profiles ranked it 3rd out of 28 freestyle boards tested.

The Disaster is Bataleon's dedicated jib and park progression board. Flex 2 out of 10 — that's soft, really soft, and that's the whole point. Construction is purpose-built for abuse: full poplar core with beech hardwood stringers for backbone and insert strength, Bi-Ax fiberglass for playful torsional forgiveness, Jib 3BT with the least sidebase uplift in the lineup for locked-in presses on rails, low camber profile, Super Slick X extruded base that's tough and cheap to repair, FlexWalls urethane sidewalls, and a SlickDeck scratch-resistant topsheet.

On features, the Disaster excels. The soft flex makes presses effortless — you can lock into nose and tail presses without fighting the board. Rails and boxes feel intuitive because the Jib 3BT keeps edges from catching on approach and dismount. Low camber gives just enough pop for ollies onto features without making the board twitchy. The extruded base takes abuse and is cheap to fix when you gouge it.

Away from park features, the Disaster is still rideable but limited. The soft flex washes out at any real speed. Hardpack carving is not this board's job. It handles groomers fine at moderate speed for getting between park laps, but asking it to be an all-mountain board is asking the wrong question. Snowboarding Profiles specifically highlights its suitability for beginners learning park tricks because of how forgiving and uncatchy the Jib 3BT feels.