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The X Games just banned electric motorcycles for being too good

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In yet another new example of an industry defying progress out of preference for “the old ways”, X Games riders and fans are going to be seeing a lot fewer electric motorcycles in the air this year. That’s after a new rule change has quietly banned electric motorcycles from competing. And the reasoning? It’s not fair to the gassers who are trying to keep up.

That’s not hyperbole; that’s the reasoning given by the X Games leadership.

The X Games is an annual extreme sports competition featuring top athletes in events like skateboarding, BMX, motocross, and snowboarding. Known for high-flying tricks and intense competition, it showcases the best in action sports while pushing the limits of what’s possible.

Think of it like the Olympics of dirt bikes, so to speak.

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As electric motorcycles and dirt bikes have become more popular, riders have discovered that the new technology has opened the door to trick innovation and stunt riding at a level not previously possible with internal combustion engine (ICE) dirt bikes.

Powerful electric dirt bikes like the Stark Varg are often lighter and faster than their gasser counterparts, and their lower weight distribution allows them to rotate and perform tricks in ways that only electrics can achieve.

In the face of that new innovation, the X Games has responded not by encouraging their use in an effort to encourage new stunts, but instead by banning them altogether.

In a statement provided to RideApart, an X Games representative explained that the move was designed to create a “level playing field” so that gassers could keep up.

“At X Games, we are committed to preserving the core of action sports while continuously evaluating new technologies. Our current competition formats are designed around the performance and characteristics of traditional gas-powered bikes, which remain the global standard for elite competition. While we recognize the advancements in electric bike technology, our focus is on maintaining a level playing field and delivering the best experience for both our athletes and fans. We’ll continue to monitor the evolution of the sport and assess how new innovations fit within X Games competitions.”

As RideApart rightly pointed out, that answer seems to fly in the face of years of technological innovation that has helped individual athletes push their sports further. X Games competitors rely on their tools, whether a dirt bike, a skateboard, or a mountain bike, to perform mind-blowing feats, and advancements in those tools have allowed each sport to progress to increasingly gravity-defying stunts.

In fact, journalist Jonathan Klein’s response to the X Games statement just about sums up the ridiculousness of the situation.

“What we likely have here are a bunch of cry-baby competitors that don’t like the Starks and other EV dirt bikes allowing riders to up the ante to the next level. To go harder than before. To take the sport of freestyle motocross to the next level just like Deegan and Pastrana and Carmichael and McGrath and Hart and Bartram did before them. And these same current riders got the folks at the X Games to capitulate to their crocodile tears.”

Ultimately, the X Games have simply confirmed what we’ve all suspected: Electric motorcycles are superior machines, and the old guard doesn’t like that their gas bikes can’t keep up anymore. Period.

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