YES Shifter 3D Snowboard | 2026
Built for Jibbers. Designed to Shift.
The YES Shifter is a dedicated jib and park board — soft enough to press and lock into features, forgiving enough to take abuse on rocky rails and end-of-season concrete, and shaped with YES's Y3D profile specifically to reduce the number of times a tip or tail catch ruins a line before it even starts. This is not a board trying to be all things. It's a board built for riders who spend the majority of their time on rails, boxes, urban features, and the jib sections of the park — and who want a setup that feels alive underfoot, presses easily into tricks, and won't punish them for experimenting. The 5/10 medium flex sits in the zone where pressing is accessible without feeling noodly, and the true twin shape means there's genuinely no difference between regular and switch — the same flex, the same feel, the same pop, in both directions.
The Y3D profile is the key technical feature. YES's 3D shaping lifts and contours the nose and tail sections outside the board's effective edge — the contact zone itself remains flat, preserving direct edge feel and normal carving behaviour. The 3D elements only come into play in the sections beyond the contact points: the lifted side bases and medium-wide centre base channel snow outwards in variable conditions, reduce the chance of catching in deep or bumpy snow, and create a more forgiving landing platform when approaches aren't perfectly aligned. On groomed park snow, you ride the flat contact area like any twin; once conditions deteriorate into the spring slush, icy bumps, and sketchy run-ins that rails and street features are surrounded by, the Y3D shape starts earning its keep. The medium uplift of the side bases means the 3D geometry is noticeable and useful without interfering with normal edge-to-edge transitions on the way to features.
Construction is built for purpose and budget: a Poplar/Paulownia core keeps the board light and responsive without over-engineering it for a use case that doesn't demand a premium layup. Biax fiberglass runs in two directions for a balanced, forgiving flex pattern with torsional softness that makes the board easy to manoeuvre and playful through presses. The extruded base is a deliberate choice at this level — lower-maintenance than sintered, durable enough to take rail contact and asphalt without demanding constant hot waxing, and honest about what this board is for. Forever Flex pre-breaks the board in at the factory, flexing the fibre and epoxy so what you buy has an already-settled, accurate flex and rocker profile that stays consistent through years of riding rather than continuing to change underfoot as you pile on sessions.
Why Ride the YES Shifter?
✅ Y3D Freestyle Profile — 3D shaping in the nose and tail outside the effective edge; contact zone stays flat for direct edge feel; lifted side bases reduce catches in variable snow, bumpy approaches, and on shaky landings
✅ True Twin Shape — Perfectly symmetrical tip and tail; identical flex and response regular and switch; the right foundation for any rider who spins both ways or spends time on rails in both directions
✅ Multi-Radius Sidecut — Blends multiple radii tip to tail for smooth, consistent edge transitions and versatile turning performance across park and resort terrain
✅ 5/10 Medium Flex — Soft enough to lock into presses and hold rail features, stiff enough to pop off kickers and stay composed on medium-sized jumps
✅ Poplar/Paulownia Core — Lightweight, consistent, and responsive; the right core for a jib-focused board that needs to feel lively without adding unnecessary weight
✅ Biax Fibreglass — Two-directional glass for a forgiving, torsionally soft flex pattern that rewards creative riding and works with your body rather than against it
✅ Extruded Base — Durable, low-maintenance, and built to handle the abuse that comes with rail contact and imperfect landing zones; less waxing required, more time riding
✅ Forever Flex — Factory pre-flex process stabilises the board's camber and flex profile before it reaches you; stays consistent from day one through years of use
Tech Specs
Shape: True Twin
Profile: Y3D Freestyle — 3D shaping in nose and tail outside effective edge
Flex: 5/10 Medium
Sidecut: Multi-Radius
Core: Poplar/Paulownia (50/50)
Glass: Biax
Base: Extruded
Features: Forever Flex, Y3D Freestyle
| Size (cm) | Effective Edge (mm) | Waist Width (mm) | Sidecut (m) | Rider Weight (kg) |
| 145 | 1124 | 244 | 7.4 / 7.0 / 6.6 / 7.0 / 7.4 | 42 – 65 |
| 148 | 1148 | 247 | 7.5 / 7.1 / 6.7 / 7.1 / 7.5 | 45 – 65 |
| 151 | 1172 | 250 | 7.6 / 7.2 / 6.8 / 7.2 / 7.6 | 48 – 70 |
| 154 | 1196 | 253 | 7.7 / 7.3 / 6.9 / 7.3 / 7.7 | 53 – 80 |
| 156W | 1210 | 262 | 7.8 / 7.4 / 7.0 / 7.4 / 7.8 | 55 – 90 |
| 157 | 1220 | 256 | 7.8 / 7.4 / 7.0 / 7.4 / 7.8 | 58 – 90 |
Wide (W) sizes are recommended for boot sizes US 10.5 and above. Multi-radius sidecut figures show the five radii blended across the board's edge from tip to tail.
Frequently Asked Questions
What size Shifter should I ride?
For a jib-focused board like the Shifter, boot size and riding style carry more weight than body weight alone. Boot overhang matters even more on a softflex board because you're spending more time flat-based and on rails than on your edges — standard sizes (145–154, 157) suit up to approximately US 10, while the Wide 156W is the right call for US 10.5 and above. For body weight, jib-focused riders generally ride shorter than the weight chart suggests — a shorter board is easier to spin, easier to press, and more responsive on features. If you're right in the middle of a size range and you spend more time on rails than jumps, go shorter. If you hit a mix of rails, jumps, and resort laps, go with the weight chart recommendation. Call us on 03 9421 2293 with your boot size and weight and we'll work it out.
What's the difference between the Shifter and the Shifter XTRM Eiki?
The standard Shifter is the accessible, soft, jib-first board in the range — Biax glass, extruded base, medium flex, designed for riders building skills on features and spending most of their time on rails and smaller park features. The Shifter XTRM Eiki is Eiki Helgason's pro model: a stiffer, more demanding version with a carbon layup that connects the toe and heel edge in the binding area (YES calls it "Carbon Layup Eiki"), a Poplar/Paulownia/Bamboo Cascade Core, and a Y3D nose and tail — it's designed for the kind of technical, high-consequence jibbing and speed that Eiki brings to his riding. If you're progressing on rail features and freestyle, the standard Shifter is the right board. If you're an advanced rider who charges hard, wants more pop, and knows what to do with a stiffer jib board, the XTRM Eiki is worth considering.
Does an extruded base matter — should I be worried it's not sintered?
On a jib board, no. Extruded bases are genuinely the right call for rail and street-focused riding: they're more durable against impacts, require less maintenance, and handle rail contact without needing constant re-waxing to stay functional. The speed difference between extruded and sintered is most relevant on long groomer runs or in race/freeride contexts — on a rail, a box, or an urban feature, you won't notice it. The Shifter's extruded base is a deliberate choice, not a cost-cutting one. It will outlast a sintered base in the conditions this board is designed for, and it's one less thing to think about when you're sessioning rails all day.
Is the Shifter right for beginners, or is it aimed at more experienced riders?
The Shifter's soft flex and forgiving Y3D profile make it accessible to intermediate riders who are starting to get into park and rail features — it's not a beginner resort board, but it's approachable for anyone who can link turns and wants to start exploring features. That said, at Buller, Falls Creek, and Perisher, the terrain park exists at all levels of difficulty, and the Shifter suits a rider who's moving from the smaller features toward the mid-range park. If you're genuinely brand new to snowboarding and not yet confident linking turns, talk to us about a more all-mountain-focused board first. If you can ride confidently and want a board that makes jibbing easier and more fun, the Shifter is built for you.
About YES Snowboards
YES Snowboards was founded in 2009 by professional snowboarders David Carrier Porcheron (DCP), Romain De Marchi, and JP Solberg, in partnership with the Nidecker family. The brand was built around the motto "YES WE CAN" — the founders started YES in the middle of the 2008 global financial crisis, hand-painting their first boards and building the brand from the ground up. YES is part of the Nidecker Group and is known for a wide, well-engineered product range across all levels of rider — the Shifter sits at the accessible, jib-focused end of a lineup that extends all the way to contest-level park boards. YES boards are designed with and for snowboarders, and the Shifter's Y3D profile is one of many technologies the brand has developed specifically to make riding better rather than just more technical.
Why Buy from Twelve Board Store?
✔️ Free shipping Australia-wide
✔️ Board sizing advice from riders — call 03 9421 2293
✔️ Authorised YES dealer with full manufacturer warranty
✔️ Flexible payment options including Afterpay & Zip
✔️ In-store at 435A Bridge Rd Richmond





