Maybe. But I’ve ridden/experimented with enough bikes that at 6’ tall I’m honestly pretty nervous about anything under a 475 reach. My current bike is 475 and I’m already running 50mm rise bars with a pretty forward bar roll just to make it feel roomy.
That’s why the new Crestline looks like it’s headed the right direction to me—480 reach and around 650 stack on a Large. On paper that means I shouldn’t have to bandaid the fit with a bunch of rise, and it should actually feel spacious without weird cockpit tricks.
465 reach, even with the high stack, just sounds pretty dang short.
If the new Dreadnought ends up around 475 reach with roughly a 450–455 stack, I think that’s way more in the right ballpark.
And honestly, I don’t think the sub-475 reach on the e-Druid is even what they want—it feels like the compromise you make when you design the whole thing around a 150 fork. What makes zero sense to me is a full-power e-bike designed around a 150 fork, unless the whole point is just to keep it separated from the inevitable e-Dreadnought.
But even then, if it were me: e-Druid gets a 160 fork, Dreadnought gets 170/180. Still different classes of bikes, still clearly differentiated, and the geo doesn’t have to do gymnastics to make the 150 fork full power e-bike thing make sense.