
171, 176, and 181 cm
120/84/109 mm at 176 cm length
19 m at 176 cm length
We’re hoping the traditional twin will make a big comeback. The 2025 Head Oblivion 84 gets a face lift for this next year but remains the same amazing twin tip that serves park skiers quite well when it comes to true twin tip performance. While Head isn’t particularly well-known for freestyle skiing, the Oblivion series that came about two years ago changed that theory. Now, Oblivion is becoming a line within a brand that is making a lot of skiers quite happy. With five Oblivion models, the 84 is the second narrowest and the one that’s likely best suited for true freestyle competition. It gets a build up from the 79 yet remains a bit more focused on dedicated park skiing than the 94. At the same time, it keeps somewhat of a directional and non-symmetrical shape that allows all-mountain experiences to still exist in this ski. Skiers love the overall sturdiness of this mid-80's twin.


With tech filtering down from the race room, this is a real-deal ski. The build of the ski is geared towards durability and energy for landing huge airs, hitting multiple rails, and just withstanding hard flexing and bending throughout the seasons. They use their wood core with a sandwich style of construction, so this feels like a real ski for sure. By including thicker material in the bases and edges, the ski has more of a hefty feel than some other mid-80's twin tips, and that’s certainly by design. In the 176, the ski hits the scale at 1834 grams, so it’s got some burliness to it for sure. They also use their independent suspension system in the build, which is basically a fancy way of indicating that the sidewall thickness is thinned as you move towards the tips and tails. While not a groundbreaking construction, it makes good sense in these twin tips that need more flex and a lighter swing weight at the ends as opposed to more directional skis that are more consistent in thickness from tip to tail. There’s a lot to be said for simplicity in this hefty construction.
The Rocker / Camber / Rocker profile of the 2025 Head Oblivion 84Mid-80's skis can check a lot of boxes, especially if they’re twin tips. At 84 mm underfoot, the Oblivion is narrow enough to hold on firmly for when the park and pipe are hard pack and ice, but wide enough still to provide a nice, balanced platform to stand on. You do need some width underfoot to be stable on landings, and there must be a nice mix between too narrow and too wide—seems like the 84 is a good place to be. With a longer turn radius of 19.3-meters in the 176, this ski is smooth and not catchy at all. As opposed to some of the other more modern park skis out there, the Oblivion 84 isn’t too big on taper in the tips and tails, relying on a more traditional shape when looking at the ski from straight on. There is some rocker with very dramatic splay, and this is also more traditional when it comes to twin tip profiles. It’s a bit less symmetrical than some others out there, so Oblivion 84 mainly sticks to the roots of freestyle/park skiing rather than more progressive shaping and styles. Camber is a beautiful thing when it comes to delivering energy and pop to the ski.
The audience for this ski may be on the smaller side, but we hope that changes. While it’s not a big deal that these skis mainly fall to the old school side of the spectrum, it does make us think whether Oblivion will move with the times/crowd when it comes to taper and rocker. Surely, there are skiers out there that prefer this style of ski, and maybe that’s a big part of the reason why they make Oblivions this way. Either way you choose to look at it, if you’re the type of skier that likes a long effective edge and a high cambered profile in their twin tip ski, this 2025 Head Oblivion 84 is the way to go. It’s like a throwback ski with modern character.











