1 / 6Nitro Cinema 2026
In Stock — Ready to Ship
At a Glance
Terrain
Ability Level
Description
The Cinema‘s directional twin shape is perfect for beginners to intermediate riders looking to rip around the local mountains and explore the entire trail map. In addition, the progression-friendly hybrid Gullwing Rocker technology will provide the pop and support to allow you to have more fun on the mountain and make memories with friends.
| Shape | Directional Twin |
|---|---|
| Flex | 5/10 |
| Profile | Gullwing Rocker |
| Core | Powercore (poplar) |
| Base | Premium Extruded FH |
| Terrain | All Mountain 10 | Park 6 | Backcountry 6 |
| Best For | All-mountain versatility — forgiving rocker for mixed conditions |
Details
- Type
- Snowboard
- Vendor
- Nitro
- SKU
- N833120-001155
Nitro Cinema
By PTO Ski Team, Based on manufacturer data, industry tests, and rider feedback · Multiple on-snow sessions on this board · Various test sites
The take
“Nitro calls it 'The Definition of Friendly Progression' — and for once, the marketing isn't wrong.”
The Cinema is Nitro's entry point for riders who want a real snowboard without spending real money. Directional twin, Gullwing Rocker, mid flex, extruded base — everything about this board says "keep it simple, keep it fun."
The Gullwing Rocker profile is the key here. Reverse camber between the bindings makes the board loose and catch-free in the center, while camber zones under each foot provide actual edge pressure when you lean into turns. It's an effective compromise: you get enough grip to link turns and build confidence, but the board doesn't punish sloppy weight shifts like a full camber board would. For someone learning to ride — or someone coming back after years off — this profile removes a lot of frustration.
The directional twin shape with -15mm setback gives the Cinema a slight preference for going forward, which helps in messy snow and gives a little float when things get soft. But you can still ride switch without feeling like you're fighting the board.
The Powercore (basic poplar, not the Powercore II) and extruded base are honest choices for this price. The extruded base is slower than sintered but it's almost maintenance-free — no waxing schedule needed, which is exactly what a beginner or casual rider wants. The Radial sidecut is simple and predictable: no tricks, no surprises.
Sizing runs wider than typical: the 155MW and 159MW are mid-wide, and the 162W is full wide. Riders with bigger feet won't have to upsize for width, which is a genuine advantage over competitors that only offer standard widths at this price.
This board has a ceiling, and intermediate-advanced riders will find it quickly. It washes out at speed, the extruded base drags in flat sections, and the Gullwing profile can't hold a hard carve on ice. But for its intended rider — first board, first season, just wants to have fun — the Cinema does its job without overcomplicating things.
Bindings we'd pair with it
Mount point: 2x4 insert pattern. Our pick: Nitro Phantom.
- Nitro PhantomMatched mid-range
Medium flex, forgiving response — matches the Cinema's friendly personality. Full Nitro setup at a reasonable combined price.
- Burton FreestyleBudget option
Soft, forgiving, and affordable. Good match for beginners who want a simple binding without overthinking it.





