Adidas has developed a new foam midsole—Hyperboost Pro—and the Hyperboost Edge is the first shoe built around it. The core engineering challenge: hit race-shoe stack heights and energy return numbers without a carbon plate or stiffening element.
The rearfoot stack measures 45mm with a 6mm heel-to-toe drop. At that geometry, most shoes rely on a plate to manage leverage and generate toe-off energy. Without one, the foam’s material properties—compression rate, rebound characteristics, and load cycle durability—carry the full performance load.
Adidas developed the formulation using material insights from its Adizero racing midsole lineup and validated it through a University of Cologne study on 60 runners.
Results: 73% preferred its energy return over their current footwear, 77% perceived softer cushioning, and a majority rated it superior on overall running experience.
Without a rigid propulsion element, the foam has to flex naturally through the gait cycle while maintaining consistent energy return under repeated loading. That’s the material science problem Hyperboost Pro is designed to solve—and why the stack height and drop figures are significant at this weight.
The PRIMEWEAVE upper is a woven construction with no overlays or welded panels—lockdown comes from weave geometry and integrated heel pods. The LIGHTTRAXION outsole runs full-length on a reduced-thickness base, derived from the Adizero platform, covering heel, midfoot, and forefoot contact zones without adding unnecessary material.
The three stripes have been moved from the upper to the midsole sidewall—a structural decision as much as a visual one, drawing attention to the foam stack as the functional core of the shoe. Upper construction uses hidden eyelets and light-bonded elements, keeping external detailing minimal and weight-neutral.
The red colorway for Hyperboost Edge is releasing on March 17 via Adidas stores and adidas.co.in, for Rs 19,999, with additional colorways from May 1.



