
The Cream Halldor 3D was so fun to ride when wanting to get creative and playful and felt effortless, nimble and energetic.
Not something you want for high speed, highly aggressive riding, but that's not what you'd buy this board for.
In this review, I will take a look at the Halldor 3D as a freestyle snowboard.
As per tradition here at SnowboardingProfiles.com I will give the Halldor a score out of 100 (based on several factors) and see how it compares with other freestyle snowboards.
Overall Rating
Board: Yes Cream Halldor 3D 2026
Price: $579
Style: Freestyle
Flex Rating: Medium (3/5)
Flex Feel on Snow: Mid-Soft (4/10)
Rating Score: 87.5/100
Compared to other Men’s Freestyle Boards
Of the 28 current model freestyle snowboards that we tested:
❄️ The Halldor ranked 6th out of 28
Overview of the Halldor’S Specs
Check out the tables for the Halldor’s specs and available sizes.
STYLE:
freestyle
PRICE:
$579 - BUYING OPTIONS
Ability Level:

flex:

feel:

DAMPNESS:

SMOOTH /SNAPPY:

Playful /aggressive:

Edge-hold:

camber profile:
Traditional Camber
TRAD Camber - Yes's "High Camber C7"
SHAPE:
setback stance:
CENTERED
BASE:
Sintered
weight:
Felt a little lighter than normal
Camber Height:
8mm
Sizing
LENGTH (cm) | Waist Width (mm) | Rec Rider Weight (lb) | Rec Rider Weight (kg) |
|---|---|---|---|
150 | 252 | 99-154 | 45-70 |
153 | 254 | 110-165 | 50-75 |
156 | 256 | 127-187 | 58-85 |
159 | 258 | 138-209 | 63-95 |
Who is the Halldor Most Suited To?
The Halldor is best suited to anyone looking for a fun playful board that doesn't make them work hard, is really low-catch and operates really well at low to moderate speeds.
Ideal for someone looking for a board to build their confidence on for learning freestyle stuff, like butter tricks, ground tricks in general, trying things on jibs (rails etc) and small to medium jumps/side-hits.
Not the best for high speed endeavors, big air or anything requiring a locked in edge, so if you like those things, it's likely not going to make a one-board quiver for you, but if you want a board to get creative on, it could be a really good quiver compliment. For the most part I would view this as part of a quiver, alongside a more powder oriented and/or stable all-mountain board, rather than a one-board-quiver board, but it could be depending on the rider.
For ease of turn initiation it's something that would work well for beginners, but its looser feel wouldn't be ideal for beginners, IMO, particularly for one-footing off the chairlift.
TEST/REVIEW DetailS FOR THE Halldor

O.k. let’s take a more detailed look at what the Halldor is capable of.
Demo Info
Board: Yes Cream Halldor 3D 2026, 156cm (256mm waist width)
Date: March 5, 2025
Carving
This isn't the board you get for railing high speed, aggressive carves on, IMO. Lower speed, gentler carves felt OK, but as soon as I got any speed under it or tried to really rip it, it was prone to washing out, pretty easily too.
Turning
Ease of Turning/Slashing: As is typically the case with a board that washes out easily on carves, the Cream Halldor was super easy and fun to slash on and really easy to initiate turns on.
Maneuverability at slow speeds: Lower speeds is where this board thrives and it's great nimbleness at slow speeds is good proof of that. It felt effortless and really fast to transition from edge-to-edge.
Catchiness: It felt right up there with the most catch-free boards to me.
Speed
As mentioned earlier, this board is most at home with lower speeds, in my experience and didn't fare super well when trying to get it going faster. Started to feel wobbly pretty early on the speedometer.
Uneven Terrain
Crud/Chunder: Given its lack of stability at speed, it was no surprise that it wasn't super stable through rough snow either. It did have the redeeming quality of being really easy to recover after being tossed around like a rag doll though.
Trees/Bumps: Where it lacks in crashing through chunder, etc, it makes up for when weaving between obstacles. Find a smooth path between trees, bumps, etc and the nimbleness of this board comes into play, being super easy to whip it from edge-to-edge between obstacles.
Not something that will fare super well when the powder gets deep in the trees, at least not without turning your back leg to much, but in shallow powder or powder-less (but not too hard/icy) tree conditions, it's going to be a treat.
Powder
Didn't have any serious powder to test in on the day but based on feel and specs, it's not going to be amazing.
What will save it from being terrible in powder, particularly deeper powder is its 3D base shaping and for shallow powder it should be quite fun, with its surfy feel. But just don't expect it to be an effortless float over deeper powder, without having to work hard to keep the nose from sinking.
Jumps
I found this board sick for smaller side-hits and jumps, but lacked the stability needed for approach and landing for bigger air.
Pop: I found the Cream Halldor's pop super easy to extract, which is something I really appreciate in a park/freestyle board. While I couldn't get a lot of extra pop out of it, when really loading it up, the total pop was decent, but nothing mega.
Approach: Nice and nimble for making adjustments to your line, speed checking etc, but did loose stability on approaches that required more speed or if the runway was choppy.
Landing: I felt it was nice and forgiving of errors for landings off smaller air and easy to make any needed maneuvers after landing or if you had to cull a lot of speed quickly. For bigger air, landings felt a bit unstable and there was too much flex, making it liable over-flex if you landed a little tail or nose heavy and liable to bounce you around a bit.
Switch
Really fun for riding switch. Naturally had very similar characteristics riding in either direction (never identical even with true twins, given leg strength etc imbalances and technique imbalances, but in the Cream Halldor's case very close to the same), and transitions felt easy and I didn't feel any real catch-threat on them.
Spins
Apart from a tendency to overspin after landing and not being super stable for landings off bigger air, I found this board to be really good/fun for spins. Helped by its easy pop, low-catch nature and easy maneuverability.
Jibbing
This was my kind of jib board - easy pop, easy maneuverability and low consequence for not getting things perfect. For higher-end jibbers hitting bigger features, you may want a bit more stability but for me it was right in the sweet spot for hitting jibs with confidence.
Butters
Apart from a feeling like you could over-flex it, I found it great for butters. Easy to press nose and tail, nose and tail felt even and transitions were easy. For stronger, more athletic riders, particularly those highly skilled at buttering, you might find yourself wanting a bit more stiffness in the nose and tail, but for me I really liked how easy and low consequence this felt to butter on.
Score Breakdown and Final Verdict
Check out the breakdown of the score in the table below.
| FACTOR | Rating (/5) | Weighted |
|---|---|---|
| Jumps | 4 | 16/20 |
| Jibbing | 4.5 | 18/20 |
| Spins | 4.5 | 13.5/15 |
| Switch | 4.5 | 9/10 |
| Butters | 4.5 | 9/10 |
| Uneven Terrain | 3 | 3/5 |
| Pow | 2.5 | 2.5/5 |
| Speed | 2.5 | 2.5/5 |
| Carving | 2.5 | 2.5/5 |
| Turns | 4.5 | 4.5/5 |
| TOTAL (after normalizing): | 87.5/100 |
The Cream Halldor thrives at low to moderate speeds for playful, creative freestyle riding and felt effortless, surfy and nimble. As mentioned a lot here, I didn't find it something that handles high speeds well - so that's not what you'd buy this board for.
But when it comes to getting slashy and creative hitting small to medium jumps/sidehits, spinning, buttering and hitting jib features, I found this board really thrived.
More Info, Current Prices and Where to Buy Online
To learn more about the Halldor, or if you're ready to buy, or if you just want to research prices and availability, check out the links below.

To check out some other freestyle snowboard options, or to see how the Halldor compares to others, check out our top rated freestyle snowboards by clicking the button below.
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