While this may come as a surprise, most creek boats are not designed to optimise performance in the extreme realm, but rather to cater to what current trends dictate a creeker should look like.
In this day and age, thats an ultra short boat with a long planing surface. A short boat with no reach or vertical stability, who’s ability to turn is restricted by the effort to make it fast. Designers have known for some time that boats are shorter than they should be, and thats why lengths have been creeping up each year.
The Critical Mass takes the leap thats necessary of extreme kayaking is to go to the next level. It has the length to punch through holes, bridge drops, and cary its speed over ramps and waves. But, the rocker shape of the Critical Mass is such that it turns more easilly than the vast majority of kayaks a foot shorter, meaning you can make last minute adjustments, correct yourself in the middle of a drop, and still have the reach to glide over anything that comes your way. The rocker and template of this versitile kayak are such that it’ll run steep creeks that you’d expect to see a kayak a foot shorter on.
Over the last few years, the common gripe of paddlers each seeking to push their own limits has been that they’re held back by the equipment: modern kayaks lack the ability to make those critical lines, and lack the mass to push through anything the river throws at you. Not any more!
(Weight and volume are Playak estimates, as Dragorossi doesn't publish those figures)