Much appreciated! Please compare the DMR Vault against the Deity Supervillain for climbing and downhill attributes.
@Singletrackmind The Deity Supervillain, then. An interesting matchup because these two are probably the closest competitors in the premium flat pedal space. Right, the Vault versus the Supervillain. This is genuinely the premium flat pedal heavyweight bout.
The key difference is platform size. The Vault runs a 105mm x 105mm square platform with 11 pins per side. The Supervillain stretches that to 113mm x 105mm with 14 pins per side. So the Deity gives you an extra 8mm front-to-back, which is meaningful real estate for your shoe. Both are concave designs, but the Supervillain pushes this further with a 2.5mm deep concave profile, which Deity claims is industry-leading. The Vault sits at 17mm concave depth in the body itself, which is less aggressive in how it cups your foot but still plenty scooped.
For
climbing, the Vault's slightly smaller, squarer platform is actually a marginal advantage. Less material hanging off the front and back means fractionally fewer pedal strikes on technical climbs, and
DMR specifically touts the low profile for increased ground clearance. The Supervillain's larger platform and more aggressive pin count mean your foot is absolutely nailed in place, which is brilliant for standing efforts on steep climbs but does make micro-adjustments to foot position harder.
BikeRadar found that once you place your foot on the Supervillain, "it's hard to shift it around, unless you actively lift it up to re-position it."
For seated spinning that's fine, but for technical climbing where you might want to subtly shift your foot, the Vault's more moderate pin aggression gives you a touch more freedom. Weight is essentially a wash: the Vault comes in at 430g per pair and the Supervillain at 420g. For
downhill and bike park, the Supervillain starts pulling ahead more convincingly. That bigger 113mm footprint combined with the deeper concavity and 14 pins per side means your foot genuinely sits
in the pedal rather than on it.
Vital MTB noted the "sure-footed feel" means "you can ride in confidence that your feet will stay where you need them to." The Vault still grips well, especially with the longer pins flipped outward, but
BikeRadar found the smaller platform can cause some foot overlap and twisting on rougher descents. For San Diego hardpack that's barely noticeable, but for proper bike park bashing with repeated square-edge hits, the Supervillain's extra platform and pinning gives you more margin.
Given your riding style and the bike park sessions, I'd lean toward the Supervillain for outright gravity confidence. The Vault remains the more versatile all-rounder, particularly if you value easy foot repositioning on climbs, and it has the benefit of being a proven design with years of group test wins behind it. But the Supervillain is the newer, more purpose-built gravity weapon, and for a rider at 84kg hitting San Diego rocks and bike park features, that extra platform area earns its keep.