Skate shoes dominate this week's drops, with a few standout deals worth acting on
Sixty percent off Etnies, a Reynolds signature at half price, and a few other cuts worth knowing about. Here are the five deals doing the most work today.

The price drops live right now skew heavily toward footwear, which is not unusual for mid-June when shops are cycling out spring stock. Most of what's listed is noise, but a handful of these cuts are deep enough, or land on specific enough products, that they're worth calling out. The Etnies Callicut at 60% off and the Nike SB Bruin High at 59% off are the headline numbers, but the deal with the most substance is probably the New Balance 933 Andrew Reynolds, which has dropped to $65 from $134.95. There's also a collab deck and a wheel deal in the mix that round things out for anyone who isn't shopping for shoes.
Shoes: New Balance 933 Andrew Reynolds — 52% off
The New Balance 933 Andrew Reynolds is sitting at $65, down from $134.95. That's 52% off a pro-model shoe carrying Andrew Reynolds' name, which matters because Reynolds has been one of the more thoughtful collaborators in skate footwear over the years, consistently pushing for construction that holds up to heavy use rather than just slapping a name on a silhouette. New Balance has been serious about their skate line since they came back to it, investing in things like Ndurance rubber and reinforced ollie zones, so the 933 isn't a lifestyle crossover marketed back at skaters. It's built around impact protection and support for someone skating at a high frequency.
At $134.95 this is a premium shoe, and plenty of skaters would reasonably pass on it at full price depending on their budget. At $65 the calculus changes. If you skate regularly and have been running cheaper options to save money, this is the kind of shoe where the construction difference is likely to show up in how long it lasts and how your feet feel after a long session. The Andrew Reynolds sig has a reputation for longevity. That matters more than most spec sheets.
Shoes: Etnies Callicut — 60% off
The Etnies Callicut is $30, down from $74.95. Sixty percent is a big number, and the honest context here is that the Callicut is a no-frills entry-level shoe without much in the way of specialized tech. Etnies built their name on functional skate construction, and the Callicut is the bottom of that range, designed for someone getting started or skating casually without needing impact absorption engineered for heavy hammering.
The reason this is worth mentioning is simple: $30 is a number where the conversation about whether to buy it is almost irrelevant. If you're teaching someone to skate, or you want a beater pair for wet days, or you're a parent buying a first shoe, this is about as low as the price floor gets on a brand-name skate shoe. Don't expect it to last through serious daily skating, but it will do the job it's designed for.
Shoes: Nike SB Bruin High — 59% off
The Nike SB Bruin High is $35, down from $85.37. The Bruin is a long-running silhouette in Nike SB's catalog, originally derived from the 1970s basketball shoe and adapted for skating. The high-top version adds ankle coverage that low-top Bruins don't provide, which makes it a more interesting option for skaters who are hard on their ankles or prefer the locked-in feeling of a high collar during transition or ledge work.
The vintage-inspired construction means it skews toward a slimmer profile than something like the Dunk High, which gives it better board feel for technical skating than you'd expect from a shoe with ankle support built in. At $35 this is genuinely competitive with skate shoes that don't carry Nike's overhead. High-tops aren't for everyone, but if you already know you like the silhouette, this is a good price.
Wheels: OJ Double Duro Chubbies 56mm 99a/95a — 34% off
The OJ Wheels Double Duro White Gum Chubbies 56mm 99a/95a dropped to $39.99 from $60.99, which is 34% off. The Double Duro construction is what makes these wheels interesting rather than generic: the outer layer runs at 95a while the inner core sits at 99a, meaning you get a harder, snappier core for energy transfer and speed retention, with a slightly softer contact surface that helps with grip and smooths out rough pavement without going full cruiser soft.
56mm is on the larger end for street skating but sits comfortably in park and transition territory, and the chubby (wider) profile increases the contact patch, which adds stability on rougher surfaces. If you're skating spots that punish harder wheels, or you want one set of wheels that works across different terrain without committing to something in the 78a range, the Double Duro setup is a sensible engineering answer to that problem. The gum colorway also holds up visually on any deck graphic. $39.99 for a wheel with this kind of construction spec is worth paying attention to.
Deck: Etnies Marana Michelin — 40% off shoes worth pairing with a deck note
Pulling the Etnies Marana Michelin into the recap separately because it sits at a different price point than the Callicut and tells a different story. It's $65.95, down from $109.92, which is 40% off. The Michelin partnership is the spec worth knowing about here: Michelin rubber outsoles are engineered for grip and wear resistance in a way that standard skate shoe rubber isn't, and Etnies has been running this collab long enough that it's not a marketing gimmick. The outsole compound is demonstrably harder-wearing and grippier on rough surfaces than what you'd find on a generic vulcanized sole.
The mid-top profile adds some ankle support without the full commitment of a high-top, which works well for skaters who want a bit of protection on heavier impacts without losing too much flexibility. At full retail this shoe is priced like a premium option and you'd want to be sure you prefer the Michelin rubber feel before committing. At $65.95 the risk of trying it drops considerably, and if you skate a lot of rough or gritty concrete, the outsole durability alone probably justifies the purchase.