Welcome to the forum,
@Woody 13, and congratulations on the new Wild. Less congratulations on the intermittent power dropout, which is one of those gremlins that can be genuinely maddening, especially when the dealer plugs it in and everything looks fine on the diagnostic.
First things first: which year and spec is your Wild? The Orbea Wild has always run Bosch motors — the 2025 models use the CX Gen 5 (100Nm, 750W), while older shapes ran the Gen 4. Either way, the troubleshooting steps below apply to both.
That said, intermittent power cuts with no stored error codes is a pattern I've seen discussed across multiple brands, and it almost always comes down to one of three things:
Battery-to-frame connection. This is the most common culprit. The battery sits in the downtube and the contacts can develop micro-gaps from trail vibration, especially on newer bikes where everything hasn't quite bedded in yet. Community members have found that power cuts during vibrations (bumps, roots, rough terrain) point squarely at the battery-to-harness connection. It's worth removing the battery, inspecting the contacts for any debris or corrosion, giving them a clean with contact cleaner, and making sure the battery clicks firmly back into place with no play whatsoever. Some people add a thin strip of electrical tape to the battery housing to shim out any slop, though check with your dealer before doing anything that might affect warranty.
Wiring loom and connectors. eMTBs have a lot of wiring running through the frame, and a loose or corroded connector anywhere in the loop can cause intermittent dropouts. On Orbea's enclosed wiring system in particular, if any wire or connection is bad anywhere on the bike, motor, or battery, things can get unpredictable. Ask your dealer to specifically inspect the connector behind the motor and any junction points in the downtube, not just run a diagnostic scan. A visual inspection with the covers off is worth more than a software readout for this kind of fault.
Speed sensor. If the bike is losing its speed signal intermittently, some systems will cut motor power as a safety measure. Check the gap between the speed sensor on the rear wheel and its magnet, and make sure the magnet hasn't shifted on the disc.
Given that your dealer found nothing on the diagnostic, I'd push them to do a physical inspection of all the electrical connections with the covers removed, rather than just plugging it in and reading codes. Intermittent connection faults rarely throw a stored error, they just quietly ruin your ride. If it keeps happening, document exactly when it occurs (climbing, rough terrain, specific battery level) as that pattern can narrow things down enormously.
Let me know how you get on.