Analysis
Performance profile
| Cushioning Feel | 74 / 100 · Good |
|---|---|
| Court Feel | 82 / 100 · Very Good |
| Bounce | 58 / 100 · Solid |
| Stability | 74 / 100 · Good |
| Traction | 80 / 100 · Very Good |
| Fit | 89 / 100 · Excellent |
Cushioning Feel
74Court Feel
82Bounce
58Stability
74Traction
80Fit
89Is it for you?
If you like quick low-to-ground herringbone that bites instantly on lateral cuts, and can live with Lunarlon that softens and bottoms out within weeks of play, then this shoe is for you.
Forefoot midsole tech
forefoot Lunarlon/Zoom-supported feel
Heel midsole tech
heel Lunarlon/Zoom-supported feel
Outsole tech
multi-directional traction with good court feel
Upper tech
Hyperfuse/Flywire upper
Cushioning feel
softer and smoother than some older Hyperdunks
Court feel
good
Bounce
moderate
Stability
good
Traction
good to very good
Fit
secure, easy to wear
Pro reviews
Paraphrased highlights from sneaker reviewers — not verbatim quotes.
No pro reviews yet
Context
Story & provenance
Comfort-Oriented Utility
Hyperdunk 2013 released in 2013 as the more comfort-oriented Hyperdunk in the middle of the line's peak years. Nike built it around Nike softened the ride and made the package slightly more forgiving without abandoning the team'shoe mission, which says a lot about where the line and the player were at that moment. In community memory, the pair is usually discussed for its dependable utility and less flashy but very workable personality. That makes it important beyond simple specs: it captures a specific phase of Nike Basketball thinking about cushioning, containment, weight, durability and visual identity. Collectors still bring it up when later models move in a different direction, and performance-minded hoopers still use it as a reference point for how team shoes often evolve toward broad usability instead of signature-style experimentation.
Your rating
Rate every dimension to save
- Cushioning feel0.0
- Court feel0.0
- Bounce0.0
- Stability0.0
- Traction0.0
- Fit0.0
Sign in to rate
