Decks are taking the biggest hits this week, plus a bearing worth noting
A 29% drop on two pro decks leads this week's recap, with a wide-platform SMA and some steel bearings rounding out the best deals live right now.

Most of the deals live this week are deck-heavy, which makes sense given how many shops are sitting on spring inventory. The top drops are clustering around 25-29%, and a few of them have enough going on technically to be worth breaking down. We pulled the five most interesting ones, including a bearing deal that stands out simply because bearing discounts are rare and this one is priced well for what it is.
Decks: Deathwish O'Dwyer Reckoning 8.3875 — 29% off
The Deathwish O'Dwyer Reckoning 8.3875 is down to $55.95 from $78.80, which is the sharpest percentage drop in today's roundup. The width, 8.3875 inches, is one of those in-between sizes that gets overlooked in spec sheets but makes a real difference underfoot. It gives you a bit more platform than a standard 8.25 or 8.38 without crossing into the territory where the board starts feeling sluggish for technical work. Brian O'Dwyer skates for Deathwish and the brand has a long track record of consistent wood quality, so you are not gambling on construction here.
At $55.95, this is about as low as you will see a current pro model from an established street brand. If your feet are sitting right at the edge between 8.25 feeling a touch narrow and 8.5 feeling too wide, this width is worth trying. The price makes that experiment low-risk.
Decks: Hopps Williams Day Dreamer 8.25 — 29% off
Tied for the biggest drop is the Hopps Williams Day Dreamer 8.25, now at $52.95 from $74.58. Hopps is a New York-based brand with a low-key reputation, not the kind of label that shows up on every rack, which is part of why deals on their stuff are worth flagging. Ben Raemers rode for them before his passing, and the brand has always carried a certain seriousness about the skaters it backs.
The 8.25 width is the default choice for a reason. It works for most street skating, fits standard truck hangers cleanly, and does not add unnecessary weight or swing weight to flip tricks. $52.95 for a current pro model at this width from a brand with actual cultural credibility is a straightforward deal.
Decks: Santa Monica Airlines PC 9.5 — 25% off
The Santa Monica Airlines PC 9.5 is the outlier in this list at $82.95, down from $110.60. That price reflects the wide format: 9.5 inches is a substantial platform, and SMA has been around since the late 1980s when wide boards were the standard before street skating pushed everything narrower. The brand has stuck to that DNA, and a 9.5 makes the most sense for transition skating, cruising rough pavement, or anyone who genuinely has larger feet and wants the foot space to match.
The 25% drop brings it to a more defensible number for what is a niche size. If you are already skating 9-plus and you have been waiting to try SMA, this is a reasonable entry point. If you are on an 8.25 and wondering if this is for you, it probably is not, but that has nothing to do with the deal quality.
Decks: Heroin Dawn of The Egg 9.4 Razor Edge — 25% off
The Heroin Dawn of The Egg 9.4 Razor Edge is at $63.95, down from $85.27. Heroin is a UK-based brand that has carved out a specific identity around oversized, egg-shaped decks with pronounced concave and a distinctive aesthetic. The Razor Edge designation refers to their sharper rail geometry, which changes how the board responds underfoot compared to a standard rounded edge. Sharper rails tend to feel more locked-in and responsive, particularly when you are riding transition or angled surfaces.
At 9.4 inches, this is wide by any current standard, and that is intentional for Heroin. The combination of the Razor Edge construction and that width is designed for skaters who want a planted, stable feel rather than a quick, flicky one. At $63.95 for a shaped deck with specific construction details from a brand that actually builds around those details, this is worth a look if the format suits how you skate.
Bearings: Quantum Metallics Steel — 27% off
The Quantum Metallics Bearings in grey reds are down to $32.95 from $44.95, a 27% drop. Bearing discounts do not come up often in these recaps because the category does not move much on price. The Reds rating here puts these in the mid-tier steel bearing category, comparable to the well-known Bones Reds in terms of positioning. Steel construction at this rating means reliable roll quality and decent durability without the cost or maintenance considerations of ceramic.
The $32.95 price point for a set of mid-range steel bearings is reasonable on its own. With 27% off, it becomes one of the better bearing deals you will see for a while. If you are running worn-out bearings or building up a new complete, this is a practical grab.