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Skate shoes dominate this week's deals, with a few non-shoe finds worth your attention

From a 59% drop on the Adidas Campus 90s ADV to a solid discount on OJ Double Duro wheels, here are the five drops worth acting on this Sunday.

Most of the action this week is concentrated in footwear, which is not unusual for late June when shops move old seasonal stock. The discounts are steep enough in a few cases to make you pay attention even if you weren't shopping for shoes. Outside the shoe pile, there's a wheel deal and a bearing deal that round out the list. Here's what's actually worth grabbing.

Shoes: Adidas Campus 90s ADV — 59% off

The Adidas Campus 90s ADV is down to $28.50 from $70.00, which is a 59% drop and puts it firmly in the "what do I have to lose" category. The Campus line has been around long enough that you already know the silhouette: low-profile, suede upper, flat sole. The ADV version is trimmed down for skating rather than lifestyle wear, so you get a bit more abrasion resistance in the ollie zones without the shoe turning into something bulky. At $28.50 there is basically no reason to overthink this.

This is the kind of shoe you buy as a second pair to rotate in, or as a dedicated session shoe for spots where you don't want to wreck your nicer footwear. The Campus is not a high-impact, heavy-cushion shoe, so if you skate a lot of stairs or gaps you might want something with more underfoot protection. For street skating at a measured pace or park skating on familiar terrain, it covers everything you need.

Shoes: Vans Old Skool 36+ and Converse Fastbreak Pro — both 56% off

Two shoes landing at $35.00 from nearly identical original prices is worth treating together. The Vans Old Skool 36+ and the Converse Fastbreak Pro are both sitting at 56% off, and they represent genuinely different philosophies about what a skate shoe should do. The Old Skool 36+ is the safe, familiar choice: reinforced stitching, protective toe cap, a shape that has been refined over decades of production. You know what you are getting. The Fastbreak Pro comes from basketball heritage, which means the last (the internal foot shape) is cut a little differently and the sole tends to feel more rigid and responsive underfoot, closer to a court shoe than a traditional skate shoe.

Which one makes more sense depends on what you skate. The Old Skool 36+ is a better fit if you want something that will take a beating over a long run of sessions without blowing out. The Fastbreak Pro suits skaters who prefer a thinner feel and quicker feedback from the board, particularly for technical footwork. At $35.00 either way, the decision is low-stakes enough that you can afford to experiment.

Shoes: Last Resort AB CM002 — 30% off

The Last Resort AB CM002 is down to $73.95 from $105.64, a 30% discount. Last Resort AB is a Swedish brand that has earned a reputation for making intentionally minimal skate shoes with serious attention to construction quality, and the CM002 fits that description. The silhouette is streamlined, the weight is kept down, and the focus is on keeping your foot as close to the board as possible without sacrificing the durability you need for repeated impacts on technical tricks.

This is the most expensive shoe on today's list by a margin, and the 30% drop is the smallest percentage in the footwear section, but the combination of brand and price point makes it the most interesting for skaters who have been waiting on it. If you have been skating minimalist shoes and want something better built than a budget option, $73.95 for the CM002 is a reasonable entry point. It is a technical street shoe first, so if you skate mostly transition or cruise spots you might not need what it offers.

Wheels: OJ Double Duro White Chubbies 56mm 99a/95a — 31% off

The OJ Wheels Double Duro White Chubbies 56mm 99a/95a dropped to $39.99 from $57.99, which is 31% off. The Double Duro construction is worth explaining if you haven't run these before: the wheel uses two different urethane compounds, a harder outer layer at 99a and a softer inner core at 95a. The idea is that the outer surface rolls fast and holds shape under impact while the inner material absorbs enough vibration to make rough pavement feel manageable. At 56mm the wheel is large enough to roll over cracks and debris without catching, which makes these a genuine option for skating street spots that are not perfectly maintained.

OJ has been making wheels since the early days of skateboarding and the Chubbies shape has a wide contact patch that adds grip and stability at the cost of a little extra weight compared to a narrower wheel. For skaters who mix street sessions on imperfect surfaces with occasional park skating, this wheel handles both reasonably well. At $39.99 it is also just a good price for a wheel with this much engineering behind it.