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Meet Reya
A short travel trail bike done the Forbidden way. Proportional geo, predictable handling, and a penchant for serving a disproportionate dose of confidence. Up, down, cross country, or back country, this punchy little bike covers ground efficiently while retaining its ability to get rowdy and hang tough when the trail gets rough.
This is suspension and geometry done right.

This is not an XCO bike with pumped-up travel. It is a bike built from the ground up to maximise fun and speed, especially on trails that don’t require the axle path of Druid.

You will NOT find:
- An idler
- A high-pivot
- Flex stays
You WILL find:
- Our ONE RIDE proportional sizing
- A re-imagined Trifecta kinematic
- A full complement of large bearings.
These and other intentional decisions work together to maximize traction, momentum, and efficiency.
Read on with your best imaginary Welsh accent in your head, or watch and listen to the real thing here:
Geometry
Like all of our bikes, Reya uses our OneRide geometry philosophy. Genuinely proportional rear centres across the size range. Something you won’t find on any other short travel bike. The benefits are the same as on all our bikes: better weight distribution, balanced suspension feel, and consistent front-to-rear tire grip.
Plus, you get the same intended trail characteristic across all sizes, regardless of rider stature or size.
We’ve paired that with steeper seat tube angles on the larger sizes, keeping rider position centred and efficient when the trail points uphill.

Reimagined Trifecta Kinematic
At the heart of the bike is a reimagined TRIFECTA kinematic. We put less priority on the axle path and more on getting the right suspension characteristic for the intended trail and use case for this category.
The goal was simple: squeeze every ounce of performance out of 120 millimetres of rear wheel travel, whether you’re climbing, sprinting, or pointing it downhill. No flex stays here. No compromised suspension characteristics. No loss of sensitivity. This is a proper linkage-driven bike.
The leverage curve is progressive, and that’s for good reason. It gives consistent support through the travel, maximising how efficiently energy transfers from you through the bike and into the ground. That applies whether you’re pedalling or pumping into terrain.
The advent of larger-volume air cans on shocks has enabled us to complement the progressivity of the linkage to deliver sensitivity and traction where it matters, without sacrificing bottom-out resistance.


Pedal Kickback.
No idler. No problem.
We fine-tuned chain feedback to give complementary behaviour across the gear range. A little more tension in the easier gears, less in the harder gears. The result is a bike that feels calm when you’re climbing and effortless on the way down. Pair that with a consistent 80% anti-rise, and you have a predictable, surefooted platform with no surprises when things get steep or rough.


Anit-Squat & Anti-Rise
Anti-squat sits around 110% at sag in the climbing gears, which hits our desired sweet spot. It’s stable under power, but still active enough to track the ground on the techy stuff. As you move into harder gears, anti-squat increases, so when it’s time to stamp on the pedals, the bike resists diving into its travel, meaning more of your effort turns into forward motion.
Finer Details
Accessory mounts and room for a full-size bottle on all sizes. Just the one bottle, actually, and that’s intentional. We prioritised shock mount locations over two bottle cages. The shock is mounted off the bottom bracket area, which gives us a stiffer base and reduces torsional loads compared to top-tube mounted shocks. It also keeps the shock mass lower in the frame

No internal frame storage. That’s also intentional. It adds weight you can’t remove, unlike a strapped-on tube and tool or a pump on accessory mounts. And let’s be real, massive downtubes aren’t exactly doing anyone any favours aesthetically. And honestly, modern hydration packs are pretty good.

Despite being light and lively, this thing is built to last. We’ve used a full complement of properly sized bearings. No undergunned hardware, no corners cut. It’s a durable package without the penalty you usually pay for durability.

No headset routing. Instead, we use our versatile cable management system so you can run your brakes whichever way you want and even have a cable-actuated shock lockout if you wish. We’ve also included ISCG mounts for those nifty little chain guides.
Build Tiers And Spec Highlights

TIER 1
FORK – Fox Factory 34SL
SHOCK – Fox Factory Float
DRIVETRAIN – SRAM XXSL T-Type
BRAKES – SRAM Motive Ultimate
WHEELS – DT 1500 Carbon w 240 Hubs
COCKPIT – OneUp/BikeYoke/fizik
WEIGHT – 25.88lbs (11.73kg)
CAD – $12,999 | USD – $10,499
UK – £9,999 | EU – €10,999

TIER 2
FORK – RockShox Pike Ultimate
SHOCK – RockShox Deluxe Ultimate
DRIVETRAIN – SRAM GX T-type
BRAKES – SRAM Motive Silver
WHEELS – DT 1700 w 350 Hubs
COCKPIT – OneUp/BikeYoke/fizik
WEIGHT – 28.70lbs (13.01kg)
CAD – $9,899 | USD – $7,699
UK – £7,299 | EU – €8,399

TIER 3
FORK – RockShox Pike Select+
SHOCK – RockShox Deluxe Select+
DRIVETRAIN – SRAM Eagle 90 T-type
BRAKES – SRAM Motive Bronze
WHEELS – DT 1900 w 370 Hubs
COCKPIT – Forbidden Components
WEIGHT – 29.40lbs (13.33)
CAD – $7,699 | USD – $6,299
UK – £6,099 | EU – €7,299
Reya is a short travel trail bike ready to rip the legs off your lunch lap crew, reclaim your window of spiritual solitude while you sync with the trail, or be the little voice that says yes to those absurd backcountry missions.
The ones that only feel fun weeks after you’re home. Full scoop on reya find here.





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