Best Freestyle or Urban Skates – The Best Inline Skates For You Right Now (Probably)


Listen, okay – what is the best ever film, or ice cream? Do you think there’s widespread agreement on that? (Ghostbusters and Phish Food by Ben and Jerries, if you were wondering).

There are—as you may guess—several contenders for the “best”…. But we’re going to zero in on one that arguably shines out as having proved itself year-in-year-out as a fantastic model of freestyle or urban skates, let’s get to it.

What are the best freestyle or urban skates? The best freestyle or urban skates are the FR1 Skates by FR, a company that split off with the illustrious brand Seba but maintained many of the great design developments the high-end company created. The FR1 skates are extremely well made in almost every area, very comfortable, fast, maneuverable, adaptable to different skating styles, reliable, and a popular skate with a lot of positive reviews by those who use them. If you want a freestyle skate, you won’t got wrong if you get these.

If you’re money has just jumped out your wallet and you’re throwing it at the screen already, you can get them here. Otherwise, read on to learn more…

What Even Are Freestyle, Freeride or Urban Skates?

You can kind of lump those three names together, for most purposes…

Broadly speaking there are five types of inline skates you can buy, because the makers of inline skates don’t like your job to be easy, so on top of 5 categories they also made the difference between the categories of skate hard to work out. Speed skates are specialised skates for races, hockey skates are for hockey, recreational skates are basically super beginner skates often with soft boot (less good for more sophisticated, faster skating), aggressive skates for ramps and grinds, then there’s everything that’s left over, which is what most people actually buy, and these are called freestyle or freeride or urban and they’re basically your decent generic skates with a hard boot (which is basically better than soft). Confusingly you can split this last category into the aforementioned names, but almost no one knows exactly how you do that…

(just to be clear, some people do know… but it doesn’t matter for our purposes)

Are These FR1 Skates For ME?

Price

Do you have $320 (around £250, or €290) to spend?

If you’ve started off with no. Don’t worry, you’re in with luck!

I have a cheaper alternative for you. The cheaper alternatives are the FR2, FR3 and FRX – all 3 of these are excellent skates, they just downgrade some of the high-end features so they can deliver a skate that’s very close in quality, but just a lot cheaper. Will lay these out below…

If you don’t know whether you want the cheaper ones or not, well, I’m afraid that’s a decision I can’t make for you.

I’m afraid this is where you’re going to have to step in and come up with the goods.

Put it this way though, if you think you’re going to have these skates for years (as many people often do), then over those years that higher price may make slightly more sense. I generally tend to invest if I’m buying important “gear” like a pair of skates, but hey, up to you…

How You Use Them

Very versatile, for general skating around the city, parks, or other environments. If you want to focus on ramps then get aggressive, but these skates will actually work for just fitness and recreational skating as well. They’re also probably decent for slalom skating (the thing with the cones).

Why is the FR1 Skate the Best Freestyle or Urban Skate?

The summary I can give is:

If you buy this skate you’re going to be happy with it…

Some Guy on the Internet

It delivers in some core areas:

It’s super comfortable (which is as you might imagine, a pretty fundamental requirement) with its beautiful thick inner liner that’s crafted to hug the contours of your feet and ankle very snuggly, but at the same time as being comfortable it’s also responsive and fast, where responsive means if you want to do something quickly with the skate like quick turning, stopping, change of direction, jumping, etc. then it does it like an extension of your leg, and also does so smoothly by which I mean the shock absorption makes the ride relatively smooth as you’re doing all this.

Add on on top that it’s a dependable and popular skate, it’s what brings it out as the standout recommendation.

Should you believe me?

Well, that’s a good question to ask. Who is this mystery man who’s so confidently telling me to go buy a pair of skates I’ve never seen, maybe he’s a spy, out to ruin my day and make me disappointed in the skates I buy.

Hmmm, you make a good point.

There is no real way for you to trust me I guess…

We’ll have to live in this weird, state of semi-trustedness together, if we can…

However, if it does make you feel any better, I do happen to own a pair of these skates, so that should at least hopefully give you an ounce of confidence this recommendation is based on something… I can tell you, they are very good skates. There are no complaints from me. When I wore them for the longest time, many hours, they rubbed a tiny bit on the front of my shin, but actually readjusted the front tongue helped me combat that a bit. But that was after skating in them all day. Otherwise they’re great all-rounders. Very solid.

Ok, fine, you’ve sold me, where should I go?

You can buy them all over the place, but:

Here’s one place to get the FR1 80 Skates

Key Standout Features

Liners is one of the most comfortable out there and the high quality cushioned foam hugs the foot in right places. This means you can skate for longer before your feet are screaming for a rest, which is the core bonus of this skate, when coupled with its high performance in terms of speed and maneuverability. It makes it a “comfortable” high performance skate, and that is what you want.

Fast with MW9 bearings, and a decent set of wheels, the frame and the plate beneath the boot work well to provide a good energy transfer whereby when you push on the skate the energy goes in the right places.

Sells very good and is a very popular skate around multiple websites. The fact that this skate is widely used across the skating community in different parts of the world and yet still has good reviews from random online reviews as well as the feedback of people in skate shops, shows that lots of people are using this skate and finding nothing too bad to complain about.

Hard shell boot has undergone testing from athletes. I heard this somewhere. Presumably when they were developing the original hard shell boot they were using actual professional skaters to test it and give feedback, this might have been Seba back in the day when they originally were developing the prototype but I might be wrong about those details. but a lot of other skate brands don’t test with athletes, is the point. with this brand, you could believe it from the quality.

Shock absorption is pretty good. a very important part of the skating experience because your legs and knees are going through a lot of bumps across the day and this smooths these out and makes sure that at the least your legs don’t end up a cracked muddle of bones after skating for 3 hours. What’s particular good is the fact that they are responsive and shock absorbing at the same time.

Some other notable features:

  • Wide lace opening – easy to put your foot in.
  • FR1 baseplate. Hidden when in use.
  • Allows user to adjust the frame position in all directions, to personalise the ride, strides, and push-offs (change).
  • Has good energy transfer.
  • Plate works with the frame and boot, great responsiveness without impacting comfort.
  • Frame is lightweight.
  • Robust.
  • Ergonomically designed.
  • MW9 bearings.

What Are All the Versions?

This is worth reading, as it gives you some great insight into the naming conventions of inline skates. Wooo! Naming conventions! Utter excitement!

The number is about the wheel size!

This is a great insight to avoid the cacophony of confusion with all the models. Basically it works like this: the number is the wheel size. Usually.

So when it’s an FR “80” it means it has 80mm wheels. When it’s an FR “90” it means it has 90mm wheels (This is the diameter we’re measuring).

When you see the FR1 310, that does not mean the wheels are 310mm (stop for a second, and just think how big 31 cm in diameter is – the length of a ruler), but means you’ve got the pair with “3” wheels, with the “110mm” (so you’ve entered into the 100mm + ) category of wheels, which are the big ones you usually only see in 3s (unless you’re looking at professional speed skates, which you’re not, so don’t worry.

But the 310s are 110mm wheels, and the 325s are, can you guess? Yes, you’ve guessed it right (hopefully) 3 wheels but at 125mm.

If you want a 3-wheeled skate, you can buy the FR 310s here (these are an excellent option). 3-wheeled area faster, but more for accomplished skaters.

Buy the FR1 90s here.

Buy the FR1 80s here.

Read more for choosing between them.

Which Size Wheels Should I Get?

Whichever wheels you like, my beautiful free-spirited friend.

But, since you’re here reading about the FR Skates, then you want either 80 or 90. That’s pretty similar in style. Choose the 80 if you’re a total newbie and want some stability, choose the 90 if you already know how to skate and want to get some more speed out of them. 90 are better, really, in that sense, as they’ll be faster. Buy the 90 here.

What About the FR 2, 3, X?

Again, a great little insight into naming conventions:

The 1, 2, 3, X are just the ‘standard’ or quality (also, you cold read: price), with 1 being the best highest quality, and X being the more entry level skates.

And then when you see something like the FR1 Deluxe, this is the ‘deluxe’ version of the best skate, but you should be aware, this basically means it comes with a different liner (so the thing you’re foot goes into, the soft comfortable sock, rather than anything to do with the boot). The liner is supposed to make the skate more responsive to your quick moves, and improve the fit.

I’m not sure if I’m a penny-pinching scrounger, or whether I splash my cashload without thinking twice

Well, I’m glad we’re here together having this discussion.

It’s very mature of you.

You don’t know, whether to scrape your savings and afford the more expensive model.

Let’s cut to the chase, if you don’t have the money, you’re always spending money on loads of objects, that you use once and then never use again, if you’ve never skated before, if you don’t have a big bunch of friends who are always going to go skating with you (the social aspect matters a bit), or if you’re not a lone wolf happy to become a skater as your main passion, just get the cheap ones mate. They’re almost as good, and you’re not going to notice the difference.

We’re talking about a little bit of plastic in the top clip instead of metal, in the lower ones, a velcro strap instead of a ratchet strap, wheels, bearing and frame are a slightly more basic (instead of “flagship”) but remember, this is “basic” from one of the leading brands with years of special design experience, which means their basic is better than the competitors “best”.

So, I don’t advise jumping on the credit card just to get skates, come on, save that for buying NFTs with a picture of a smiling cat. What could go wrong there?

Having said that, if you are actually going to be skating loads, the FR2 is the best bang for your buck if every penny matters, as it’s basically pretty close to the FR1, with a slightly lower spec frame, but its frame is better than the FR 3 and FRX. 

If you’re a seasoned skater who wants regular sized wheels (i.e. you don’t want to big 3 wheeled option, with 3 x 110mm wheels), then you should go for the FR1 90. These have 90mm wheels as seen in the name. You can buy them here.

Everyone else who is reading this: If you’re not super seasoned, then get the FR1 80s. You can buy them here.

If you are completely strapped for cash and want to get the entry level, choose between the FRX (the cheapest, but still a decent skate) and the FR 3.

Super cheap option: FR X, you can buy that here. This is with 80mm wheels which is standard.

Feet Sizes for the FR Skates.

IF you are between sizes, get the one above. If you are on the big side of that size, get the one above.

But generally, you can get the size of shoe you wear. For example, someone I know has sized 10.5 feet (huge!). And they get size 11 in the skate.

They should be comfortable straight away and not hurt.

You should be able to tell if they hurt, to be honest. Anything that constitutes “pain” rather than “snugness”.

If you push forward on your toe and it’s crammed up against the end, not a good sign. However, if it’s just snug, the more you wear those squishy liners in over time, they’ll start to stretch to accommodate your foot. Obviously, it’s the fit within the liner that matters so if you’re in danger of squeezing out of the liner and cramming into the plastic with your foot, that’s a big no no.

Is Your Author Becoming Less Irreverent in His Old Age?

Now, arguably not specifically to do with what the best 3-wheeled skates you can buy, it is nonetheless an important question.

As I get older, do we think, as the audience of inlineskateworld.com, that your writer is becoming less creative, as he heads towards 40? Now, I realise some people will say that’s not old, and others will say that’s extremely old. And still others will say, why the hell are you talking about this now, on a page about 3-wheeled inline skates. I would just say, I guess it’s all relative. It’s old for say, a caterpillar, but not for say, a giant redwood.

In any case, it is something that concerns me.

I hope me raising my concern in this forum, on this article, has helped you contemplate what skates to buy.

I feel like it puts everything into perspective a little…

(on reflection, this is probably not going to be helpful to you, but I am leaving it here for posterity)

Once more, as ever, if you have an issue with this, please write a long detailed letter about your feelings, and then keep it on you at all times, in case we ever meet in person.

Are These Really The Best Ever Skate For You?

Sorry to slap you in the face with some cold hard truths but… it’s probably more accurate to say there isn’t actually a “best one”

If you look all the way down, beneath your knees, to those floppy little appendages attached to your ankles, you may see why. IT’s because your feet (hopefully) are not identical to my feet (that would be very weird, if they are, however, please send photographic proof to finallywehaveproof@identicalfeet.com)

And because you and I are destined to have different feet forever, some of the skates fit slightly differently, and it’s possible others might fit your feet better.

I have wide feet, like all great writers, so these skate definitely accommodate a wider forefoot, but I have good reason to suspect these boots will be good for narrower feet as well, which is why they’re a good all-rounder for this recommendation.  

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