Complicated feelings about this! (I was drunkposting in here last night and then deleted it because it was a big ramble.) So here comes another big ramble.
In the broadest of broad strokes, I like that they're trying something different. The idea "I don't want to burn through five wood decks a year; I want one deck to last all season" is valid.
The guy's video on their site seems sincere about wanting to make a better skateboard (Linus pumpkin patch approved!)
I didn't realize they'd been around so long making boards. There's a Ben Degros video from 2020 testing one of their earlier bamboo+fiberglass attemps.
...which is weird because that seems like it would be better, environmentally. Leave the plastic out, stiffen the renewable bamboo with the fiberglass layer, done.
(It'd be a cradle to cradle "monstruous hybrid," but that's another whole long discussion.)
The microplastic situation might not be worse than skating with rails? One plastic board per year vs 4 sets if rails per year? I dunno...
Apart from the environmental angle, their pitch seems to be that it lasts longer, slides better, and sounds/pops the same as a regular board. So far so good.
Then they introduce this idea that it's all one molded piece. It isn't laminated, so it cant delaminate. And the reinforcing fibers run the whole length of the deck, strengthening it sort of like reinforced concrete. Now THAT tickles the nerdy design-school part of my brain.
But then: the reviews say that it's thicker and heavier than a normal board (Homer voice: "that's bad!")
Structurally, if you're fiber-reinforcing a material, the whole point is to make it thinner and lighter.
So for now I have to tell them what I'd tell any first year design student. It's a good idea! Keep working on it. But it's not there yet.
Edit: went ahead and watched the "levi goes pro" part. If they didn't zoom in on the logo, you wouldn't know that he was skating a "different" board. So what do I know? Maybe it IS "there yet." Or maybe if you're pro level you can skate a walmart deck and make it look good.