MTB Report (GB)

RadicalLifeStudios

🇬🇧 MTB Report – The Real Mountainbike Podcast Once a month, it’s time for the MTB Report – your podcast for everything that moves the mountain biking scene. Real stories, real experiences, real opinions. It’s all about bikes, trails, tech, and the life in between – raw, direct, and authentic. In between, you’ll get short news episodes – quick updates with everything that matters in the MTB world, straight to the point. No show. No filter. No fake. Just passion on two wheels and honest insights from the world of mountain biking. 🎧 think radical – live radical.

  1. 3 DAYS AGO

    Forbidden — why pairing the Druid with Avinox is more than “just another e-bike launch”

    Why Forbidden chose DJI’s Avinox, what that actually changes day to day — and the details most people skim past. Published by the Radical Life Studios / MTB Report Some brands want to be loved. They want to be understood at first glance, celebrated in comments, easy to explain in a sentence. Forbidden has never felt like that kind of brand. Forbidden feels like a quiet challenge: here’s the  bike — go ride it properly, then come back with an opinion. That mentality made sense in the analog world already. Forbidden built a reputation around composure, traction, and that planted “it just holds a line” feel when trails get fast, messy, and unpredictable. What’s new now isn’t that Forbidden is doing e-MTB. What’s new is the choice of system: Avinox. And that choice doesn’t read like a safe, conservative move. It reads like a deliberate shift in how Forbidden wants to compete — not with hype, but with a full package that combines power, compact integration, and a more tech-driven approach to control. Forbidden frames the Druid E lineup as a “proportionally sized” full-power concept — in other words: full-power support without turning the bike into a giant battery container. That sounds like a marketing line until you look at what the Avinox system is trying to do. DJI positions Avinox around high output in a compact form factor, with strong peak numbers and a system philosophy that leans heavily on sensors, control logic, and software behaviour — not just raw torque for the sake of it. And that’s the key: for Forbidden, “more power” is only interesting if it translates into usable traction and predictable drive on technical climbs and ugly surfaces. Forbidden’s own messaging leans into exactly that — not “it’s strong,” but “it stays controllable when it gets steep, loose, and technical.” That is a very Forbidden way of selling an e-MTB: not as a toy, but as a tool for real trails. Now let’s talk about the part that actually changes how you live with the bike: charging. A lot of riders obsess over torque figures, then accept overnight charging as normal. Avinox is clearly trying to make charging speed part of the experience, not an afterthought. That matters internationally because riding patterns vary: alpine day-trips, bike-park weekends, travel van life, content days, multi-ride schedules — in many places the limiting factor isn’t battery capacity, it’s the ability to reset quickly between sessions. If fast-charging is part of your real routine, it’s not a nerd feature. It’s freedom. But here’s the detail most people don’t say out loud: fast charging is only fast charging if your setup actually includes the fast-charging path. Systems often ship with a standard charger that’s “fine,” while the truly rapid option is a separate purchase or a deliberate configuration choice. There’s nothing shady about that — it’s just the difference between a headline and real life. If you want Avinox to be the “charge quick, ride again” story, you build your kit around that intention. Another underappreciated piece is how Forbidden is structuring the lineup. The Druid E concept isn’t “two completely different  bikes,” it’s two personalities of the same idea: LitE versus CorE, typically differentiated through battery capacity focus and build intent. That’s smart globally, because it matches how people actually ride. In some regions and communities, riders want the lighter, more agile feel for technical trail riding and everyday use. In others, range and reserve matter more — long mountain days, bigger elevation, colder weather, heavier riders, more gear. Instead of pretending one configuration fits all, Forbidden is basically saying: pick your character, not just your colour. https://radicallifestudios.de⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://mtb-report.com⁠⁠⁠🎧 think radical – live radical.

    7 min
  2. 5 FEB

    Eurobike 2026 – When the Associations Walk Away, It’s Not Just a Trade Show Problem

    Two key industry associations pull out — and suddenly it’s about trust, structure, and who still sets the tone in the bike world. Published by Radical Life Studios /  MTB Report There are moments in the bike industry where the real story isn’t a new bike — it’s a power shift. Quiet, unglamorous, but with consequences that eventually reach riders. That’s exactly what’s happening on the Eurobike front heading into 2026. Two of Germany’s most influential industry associations have publicly stated that talks about the future direction of the show have failed. The result is blunt: they’re ending cooperation — and they won’t participate in Eurobike 2026. This isn’t “drama.” It’s a structural signal: “The format, as it stands, no longer works for our members.” And when associations say that, it’s rarely about minor details — it’s about cost, relevance, and whether a platform still serves its core purpose. The associations referenced a joint feedback process and a reform framework meant to guide talks — essentially a push for a show that delivers more tangible value for brands and the trade, not just visibility. And yes: this matters for MTB. Eurobike has traditionally been one of the places where “industry reality” and “industry narrative” collide — where trends are crowned, where certain concepts get momentum, and where absence alone can become a statement. On the same day, the organizer published a formal response, pointing to changes already in motion: adjusted duration, different participation options, a reshaped program — and the creation of an advisory board to steer development going forward. Soon after, a planned urban-mobility spin-off was shelved, alongside messaging that the 2026 show remains open and inclusive. Because the broader market is in a correction phase: post-boom stock pressure, tighter spending, more cautious retail — the kind of environment where companies scrutinize every major expense, including trade shows. In that climate, a show can’t survive on tradition alone. It needs measurable value: order relevance, global pull, cost efficiency, and a clear identity. Short term, it likely means less “trade show monopoly.” If major stakeholders aren’t there, attention shifts to alternative formats: brand launches, regional test festivals, dealer events, demo days, and smaller focused gatherings. Long term, the bigger question is: who controls the stage next? Because the stage shapes the story — and the story shapes what gets built, what gets funded, and what riders end up buying. This isn’t just a trade show dispute. It’s a confidence dispute — and in 2026, that’s completely predictable. The industry is searching for stability: less spectacle, more function. If Eurobike lands that shift, it can come back stronger. If it doesn’t, the market will build new stages elsewhere — faster than most people expect. More MTB News and deeper background stories at MTB-Report.com — and the German hub at MTB-Report.de. Bicycles & AccessoriesWhat’s the real dispute?How did the organizer respond?Mountain BikesWhy this hits harder.What this means for ridershttps://radicallifestudios.de ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://mtb-report.com⁠⁠⁠🎧 think radical – live radical.

    4 min
  3. 3 FEB

    DJI Avinox 2026 – The Motor That’s Making the Industry Nervous

    More and more new e-MTBs are being built around DJI and the conversation is shifting from torque numbers to trust, service, and real-world reliability. Published by the Radical Life Studios / MTB Report DJI isn’t “just another motor brand.” In other industries, DJI has proven how quickly a market can tilt when a new player combines hardware, software, and production into one coherent ecosystem. That exact tension is now creeping into the e-MTB world: 2026 doesn’t feel like a normal model year. It feels like a turning point. Because Avinox is no longer a niche experiment. It’s becoming a platform — and the more brands commit to it, the clearer the signal gets: the market is willing to challenge the established giants. What’s driving the momentum is the same mix riders have been asking for since the heavy years: high output, compact packaging, modern integration, and a system approach that treats software as core — not an afterthought. Avinox is being positioned as a drive unit that doesn’t just deliver power, but also a tightly integrated experience: tuning logic, modes, connectivity, and a battery ecosystem designed to work as one. DJI itself is leaning into that “complete system” message, including multiple battery options presented as part of the platform, not a random accessory. And that’s the point where this becomes bigger than a spec sheet: DJI isn’t selling a motor. DJI is selling an ecosystem. https://radicallifestudios.de ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://mtb-report.com⁠⁠⁠🎧 think radical – live radical.

    5 min

About

🇬🇧 MTB Report – The Real Mountainbike Podcast Once a month, it’s time for the MTB Report – your podcast for everything that moves the mountain biking scene. Real stories, real experiences, real opinions. It’s all about bikes, trails, tech, and the life in between – raw, direct, and authentic. In between, you’ll get short news episodes – quick updates with everything that matters in the MTB world, straight to the point. No show. No filter. No fake. Just passion on two wheels and honest insights from the world of mountain biking. 🎧 think radical – live radical.