ASICS Metafuji Trail 2 Launches: New X-Shaped Carbon Plate, FF LEAP Foam, $250

Just In ASICS unveils the Metafuji Trail 2 — new x-shaped carbon plate, lighter build, $250, out August 1

ASICS pulled the wraps off the Metafuji Trail 2 on July 10 in Kobe, and the timing wasn’t an accident — the shoe made its racing debut the same day, with Tom Evans lacing up the finished version at one of the world’s biggest 100-mile trail races. If you’ve been following the super-shoe arms race move off the road and onto singletrack, this is the one ASICS has been building toward since the original Metafuji Trail landed back in 2024.

The Backstory

Why this launch matters

The first Metafuji Trail was, by most accounts, a bit of a mixed bag — blazing fast on runnable gravel, but a handful on anything technical. ASICS knew it, and rather than a cosmetic refresh, the brand rebuilt the plate geometry from scratch. The result made its prototype debut in the toughest possible testing ground: Chamonix, at UTMB 2025, where ASICS athletes Tom Evans and Ben Dhiman ran the unreleased shoe to a one-two finish through wind, hail and technical alpine descents. That result did a lot of the talking before the shoe even had a name.

Key Numbers

What’s changed on paper

$250 Launch Price
255g Weight (Men’s)
5mm Heel-to-Toe Drop
3.5mm Outsole Lugs
Aug 1 Global Release

ASICS says the new pair sheds about 5 grams off the original despite adding material, and keeps the same 5mm drop runners were used to. That’s a small number on a spec sheet, but on a shoe built for ultra-distance racing, every gram tends to get noticed by the athletes wearing it for 15, 20, sometimes 30 hours at a stretch.

Under The Hood

The tech that’s actually new

⚙️ X-Shaped Carbon Plate Swapped out for a trail-specific design meant to help propulsion on climbs while staying controlled on descents — the part of the old shoe that drew the most criticism.
🪶 FF LEAP Foam on Top ASICS’ lightest, bounciest foam now sits above the plate, with FF BLAST PLUS underneath doing the cushioning work for the long miles.
🧗 ASICSGRIP Outsole 3.5mm lugs for traction across mixed alpine terrain, paired with a SOLYTE sockliner for step-in comfort on long start-line waits.
“What stood out to me immediately was the combination of speed and cushioning — it feels light and propulsive on the climbs, but still comfortable and controlled deep into long technical efforts.” — Tom Evans, ASICS trail athlete
Metafuji Trail 1 vs Metafuji Trail 2

How it stacks up against the original

SpecMetafuji Trail (2024)Metafuji Trail 2 (2026)
Weight~258g (men’s)255g (men’s)
Heel-to-toe drop5mm5mm
Carbon plateFull-length, straightX-shaped, trail-tuned
Top-layer foamFF BLAST+ dominantFF LEAP on top of FF BLAST+
Outsole lugs2.7mm–4.5mm (varied by report)3.5mm
Price$250$250

Worth flagging: independent lab testing on the original Metafuji Trail found energy return that trailed the price tag a little, and reviewers pointed to shallow lugs as a weak spot on muddy, technical ground. Whether the new plate and foam stack actually fix that will come down to hands-on testing once the shoe ships — the marketing copy reads well, but trail shoes tend to get judged on the descents, not the press release.

One thing to watch: ASICS is pitching this squarely at competitive racers chasing podiums, not everyday trail mileage. If you run mixed terrain for fun rather than racing UTMB-style events, this probably isn’t the shoe FatMarathoner would point you to first — we’ll say more once we’ve had time on the trail ourselves.
Who It’s For

Should you buy it?

Makes sense if you…
  • Race competitive ultras and technical mountain terrain
  • Already run in ASICS super shoes and want a trail equivalent
  • Prioritise a low weight-to-cushion ratio for long days on feet
Skip it if you…
  • Run trails casually and don’t need race-day propulsion
  • Want a shoe built to last through heavy weekly mileage
  • Aren’t ready to spend $250 on a race-specific pair
FatMarathoner Take
A Genuine Rebuild, Not a Repaint — But the Trail Will Have the Final Say

ASICS didn’t just refresh the colourway here — the plate geometry and foam stack are meaningfully different from the shoe that launched two years ago, and the UTMB one-two finish is about as strong a real-world stress test as a prototype can get. Whether it translates into a shoe worth $250 for the average trail racer is the question we’ll be chasing once pairs are actually on runners’ feet after August 1.

Source: ASICS press release, 10 July 2026, via TheNewsMarket / ASICS EMEA newsroom. Independent testing data referenced from RunRepeat and Road Trail Run.

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