Season 3
| # | Rider | Points | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | JDR_ | 300 | |
| 2 | Bvitalo | 293 | |
| 3 | Cabral | 289 | |
| 4 | Sandwich | 283 | |
| 5 | pudasurf | 274 | |
| 6 | BurgerTime | 272 | |
| 7 | Stapho | 270 | |
| 8 | lmarg2001 | 266 | |
| 9 | Popy_13 | 262 | |
| 10 | Masacrador13 | 252 |
Our custom-built wave engine delivers realistic barrel physics, enabling layback snaps, El Rollos, and deep tube rides that feel authentic.
Two distinct sports with unique mechanics. Surfing features aerials, cutbacks, and barrel riding. Bodyboarding brings El Rollos, ARS, and backflips.
Experience the wave from the rider perspective. Feel the drop, the speed, and the barrel closing around you.
Compete in 16-rider bracket tournaments with man-on-man heats and direct elimination. Climb the global PVP rankings.
Compete across a full season of tournaments. Earn points, climb divisions, and win trophies in the ultimate competitive circuit.
Play with keyboard and mouse or your favorite game controller. Full Xbox and PlayStation controller support.
Use our professional-grade Wave Editor to customize size, speed, and shape. Share your creations with a community that has been riding together since 2007.
The beach was empty save for a lone umbrella, a battered boombox, and two figures who didn’t normally share the same horizon. Master Roshi lounged on a towel with sunglasses that had seen better decades and a straw hat tilted just so. He had the look of a man who had perfected the art of doing very little and enjoying every second of it. The sea hissed in patient rhythm, gulls calling like a forgotten audience.
Android 18 considered the statement, then folded her arms. “And sometimes it’s about choosing what to protect,” she said. “I was built to fight. I chose to keep living instead.” android 18 x master roshi chuchozepa extra quality
At one point, a kid at the next table recognized Roshi and squealed in delight. Android 18 felt the familiar reflex of stepping into a protective stance; the child’s eyes, wide with fandom, turned instead to Roshi, and then—unexpectedly—to her. The kid’s curiosity was blunt and honest: “Are you a robot who can fly?” The beach was empty save for a lone
— end —
Android 18’s face softened imperceptibly. “I thought you might be bored,” she said. Her voice had the casual cadence of someone who’d seen too much to be surprised. “And I wanted a change of scenery.” The sea hissed in patient rhythm, gulls calling
She took it, and for a heartbeat the robot and the recluse were simply two people drinking warm tea while waves kept their slow, perfect time. In the end, neither of them needed to be fixed. They needed company.
Roshi’s eyes lit up. “Cafés! I know a place.” He leaped to his feet with the speed of a man half his age—then, true to form, collapsed back onto the towel. “No, no, I’m old. But I know a good noodle spot. They’ve got seaweed like clouds and broth that’ll fix a bad day.”