Positives

  • Agressive
  • Poppy
  • Fast
  • Edge Hold

Negatives

  • Base Needs Frequent Waxing

Summary

The Lib Tech Golden Orca sits between the Orca and T.Rice Pointy for those who want a forgiving, grippy, mid-wide one-board quiver. Not much has changed on this board over the years, mostly just a new environmentally sustainable top sheet and core. We're updating this review to give you a big guys perspective because I more properly fit the specs on this board. This is a board that's made for large riders, a size ten boot or up.

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Riding Style All Mountain Freestyle
Riding Level Intermediate - Expert
Fits Boot size (US) 8-10, 10-12, > 12
Manufactured in Washington State
Shape Tapered Directional
Camber Profile Directional Camber
Stance
Approx. Weight Feels Normal
Split No
Powder Good
Base Glide Good
Carving Good
Speed Great
Uneven Snow Great
Switch Great
Jumps Great
Jibbing Average
Pipe Good
On Snow Feel

Locked In

Turn Initiation

Medium

Skidded Turns

Semi-Hard

Flex

Medium/Stiff

Buttering

Semi-Easy

Edge Hold

Hard Snow

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An In Depth Breakdown of the Lib Tech Golden Orca For Average Riders Review by The Good Ride

Lib Tech Golden Orca Review

Lib Tech Golden Orca Snowboard Review by The Good Ride
Lib Tech Golden Orca Snowboard Review by The Good Ride

How It Was Tested

Size:164
Days:12+
Conditions: Varied Mid-Winter Conditions with some decent Powder.
Riders:Davey (Size 12, 250lbs, 6’4”)
Boots: Nitro Team TLS
Insoles: Footprint Kingfoam Orthotic Elite
Bindings: Union Force
Redundancy: Strapins in case boots or bindings break.
Helmet: Smith Method
Goggle: Smith 4D Mag

Ethics Statement

I was not paid to do this review, and it comes from an honest, objective perspective with no brand oversight. If this review helped, we’d appreciate it if you support objective content by:

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Sizing

Lib Tech Golden Orca Sizing
Lib Tech Golden Orca Sizing

I’m a size 12 boot, 250 pounds and six foot three and a half. The 164 fit me perfectly. I love the bigger sizing on this board. If I sized down, I don’t think I would have experienced the full personality of this board. For someone who can handle the hard charging nature, I recommend sizing up. Only size down if you want more control for spins or tighter terrain.

Durability

No issues with durability. This board feels solid. The top sheet is glossy and holds up well. No noticeable binding marks even after riding. The updated construction improves both performance and environmental impact.

Shape

This board is tapered and slightly set back, but less so than the Orca II. It has nine millimeters of taper but feels less pronounced. It rides more centered and feels more like an all mountain board.

Camber Profile

Lib Tech Golden Orca Camber
Lib Tech Golden Orca Camber

The Golden Orca has Lib Tech’s C2X camber. Rocker between the feet with camber zones under both feet. The front camber is longer and more elliptical, while the back is shorter and more aggressive. It can feel slightly auto spinny when flat basing, so keep it on edge.

This board is best for committed intermediate riders up to experts. It is harder to skid turns and more demanding than typical C2 boards.

Flex

Lib Tech Golden Orca Flex
Lib Tech Golden Orca Flex

This board is stiff. The nose and tail are both very stiff, with slightly more give in the middle than the Orca II. It is not the easiest board to butter due to its stiffness and size.

Pop

This board is a monster when it comes to pop. It has a ton of spring out of the tail and boosts you off jumps. The longer tail provides strong takeoff and solid landing support. This board wants to go fast and get air.

Edge Hold

Edge hold is exceptional. The magnetraction grips hard but is less grabby than older versions. It performs well in both soft and icy conditions.

Uneven Snow

In hard uneven snow, it absorbs chatter and stays damp. In soft uneven snow, it is a powerful chunder buster. It becomes smoother and more stable as conditions soften.

Switch & Park

Lib Tech Golden Orca Park Jump
Lib Tech Golden Orca Park Jump

This rides switch surprisingly well for a directional board. Its centered feel encourages riding and landing switch.

It has the grip and drive for pipe riding. However, it is harder to get on edge and lacks the ideal sidecut for most riders.

Turn Initiation

Turn initiation is slower than expected. It is harder to get on edge, but once engaged, it holds strong. This board prefers down the line riding over tight carving.

Speed

This board is extremely fast. You will often need to control your speed rather than try to gain it.

Base Glide

Base glide is solid but requires frequent waxing. The sintered base has poor wax retention and dries quickly. Frequent maintenance is necessary for optimal performance.

Powder Performance

This board floats well in powder. It performs best when ridden centered, especially in steeper terrain. It planes smoothly and carries speed well in powder. Slightly behind the Orca II in float but still very capable. Wish I could’ve gotten this out in some true bottomless steep and deep powder.

Final Thoughts

This board rips. It is centered, aggressive, and built for speed and big air. Has a powerful tail that pops, launches, and lands well. It complements the Orca II as part of a two board quiver. If you want a hard charging, big mountain style ride, this is an excellent choice. Stick to your normal size or size up if it fits your boot. This is a Big Guy’s favorite and an exceptional board overall.

 
Lib Tech Golden Orca Past Reviews

2022-2025 Lib Tech Golden Orca Review

The Lib Tech Golden Orca sits in between the Orca and T.Rice Pointy for those who want a forgiving grippy mid-wide one-board quiver.

Update 2025: There are little to no changes since we reviewed the Golden Orca except the 2025 might have a faster base. 

Ethics Statement: We don’t get paid by the manufacturer to write these reviews, and this is our unfiltered opinion. We do make money from the “Where To Buy” links, but this is our best attempt at an honest and objective review from an average rider’s perspective.

Lib Tech Golden Orca – How it rides and who it is for

Lib Tech Golden Orca Snowboard Review

How This Review Happened:

Precious Good Ride dollars were spent to buy this and review it.
Size: 157 and 153
Days: 4
Conditions: Pretty good groomers and not the best groomers. 
Riders:
 James (Size 9, 5’10” 185-190lbs), Nick (Size 10, 160lbs, 5’8”),
Boots: Burton Kendo, Burton Ion
Insoles: F.I.T. Gamechangers
Bindings: Union Atlas, Union Force
Helmet: Smith Maze
Goggle: Smith 4D Mag
Gloves: Burton AK Clutch Glove, Burton AK Tech Leather Glove

Similar Boards (but not the same): Yes Pick Your LineBurton Flight Attendant, Jones Flagship, Burton Cartographer, Burton Instigator, Korua Otto, Jones Frontier

Set-Up: 21.5” Wide. Sance Angles +18/-9. Close to Reference and Set all the way back.

How It Was Tested

I rode this the same day as I rode the Gnu Banked Country and Orca. I rode the 153 mid-winter at the demos and got 4 runs. Both days, I rode the Burton Kendo and Union Atlas.  Davey rode the Apex orca and then the Golden Orca. Then rode the Golden Orca solo all day. Both days were with Burton Ion’s and Union Force.

Approximate Weight

The Lib Tech Golden Orca feels pretty normal. Not too heavy and not too light. (We don’t put in the exact weight because with wood cores, there is no consistency in a board weight)

Sizing

The Lib Tech Golden Orca  is definitely more of a mid-wide to wide ride. It was not a good fit for my size 9 boots. My weight was a bit too much for the 153 and if felt a little too flexy but the 157 felt a little too hard to turn for my boot size but fine for my weight. The 157 was small for Davey but doable and the 161 would have been ideal for his 12 boots and 240lbs. Nick would have really liked the 153 with size 10 boots and 160lbs but the 157 was a bit too much.

Here are some ideal US boot sizes for these boards. You can of course go bigger or smaller but these work best for not turning the board slower than it should be and not having the dreaded Toe & Heel Drag.
150: 9-10
153: 10-11
157: 10.5-11.5
161: 11-12

Shape/Camber/On Snow Feel/Ability Level

Lib Tech Golden Orca Snowboard Camber

The Lib Tech Golden Orca has a touch less taper than the Orca but is less set back and just less directional overall. It feels in between an all-mountain board and a freeride board. There is a directional C2x thing happening with a pretty abrupt rocker between the feet, a mellow long elliptical camber leading up to a long nose and a shorter more prounced camber in the tail. Neither camber touches the snow when unweighted. It’s loose and auto-spinny like all Lib-Tech hybrid rockers, but it’s forgiving. There isn’t that much of a tapered feel to it either. It still needs and likes weight over the back foot on a turn but it’s not as much as others.

Flex Personality

The Lib Tech Golden Orca is a little stiffer than the Rasman (review coming) but it is not as stiff as the Orca overall. Especially in the tip/tail. The rocker in the middle makes it pretty easy to butter. What we all love about this and most Mervin boards is they really seem to find a way to accentuate the wood core and make it pop hard without being too chattery.

Speed

The base of the Lib Tech Golden Orca is not super fast, but when waxed well, it has decent glide. It just isn’t one of those super gliders that you can find at this price point. You can point it as long as you are a little bit on edge.

Uneven Terrain

The tip/tail has chatter happening, but it isn’t the kind of chatter that bucks you out of your line or reverberates into your joints when it’s messy or micro-bumpy.

Edge Hold

Really excellent grip. It might be a touch more mellow than the regular, but it still seems like full mag and not the mellow .5 mag that some Lib-Tech boards have. You just have to stay on edge in hard snow because it feels pretty loose in those conditions.

Turning Experience/Carving

The Lib Tech Golden Orca turns pretty quickly edge to edge. The 153 turned way faster than I thought it would for its width. Like the regular orca, we all like riding this set almost all the way back so we can have our back foot almost centered over the camber. It turns a lot better this way. You still don’t get that springy, satisfying spring out of the turn like you do with camber dominant boards, but it’s very good for hybrid rocker. There is also a very balanced turning radius that isn’t as turny as the Orca, but it sure does

Powder

With a -2.25” set back on board at a 22.75” stance with all the way back, the Lib Tech Golden Orca isn’t super set back. It does have a good amount of taper and a pretty long nose. The Orca is better, has a longer nose and is more set back on board by almost 2”. If you like directional float, it’s all about the Orca, but if you want a board, you can switch on occasion or ride more centered in steeper terrain. This could work.

Switch/Pipe/Jumps

The Lib Tech Golden Orca isn’t perfect switch, but it is really good for how much taper there is in the board and the directional C2x happening (see On Snow Feel). Grip works for the sidecut in the pipe and if you are slightly on edge it tracks super well into little kickers.

Conclusion

So overall, the Lib Tech Golden Orca is a pretty good one-board quiver for those who don’t want something as directional as the Orca but want something way less true twin than the Blunts and Pointy’s.

 
Lib Tech Golden Orca Specs

 
Lib Tech Golden Orca Images

We try to get as many images of the Lib Tech Golden Orca, but forgive us if they're not all there.

2025

2023

2022

Lib Tech Golden Orca User Reviews

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