Skip to main content

Rip Serious Singletrack with BULLS Bikes

As fun as hiking in the backcountry is, sometimes we like to travel a little faster on the trail. A good mountain bike is your ticket to charging down singletrack like a pro. However, if you don’t know where to begin, picking out a bike can be a daunting task. We recently discovered BULLS Bikes, and their direct to consumer model is a convenient way to shop for a bike, and get a good build quality and a lower price.

Related: Our Favorite Summer Mountain Biking Gear The Best Fat Bikes

Recommended Videos

BULLS got their start as a house brand of massive German bike conglomerate ZEG in the late 1990s. In 2006, they brought in a new design team and the original Copperhead 3 bikes was born. Since then, BULLS bikes have been the most often winners of the famed Cape Epic mountain bike stage race.

Of course, we didn’t set out to win any marathon distance ride – we needed a seriously plush ride on technical Rocky Mountain trails in our home playground in Utah’s Wasatch and Oquirrh mountains. Enter, the BULLS Wild Cup 2 ($1499). Featuring 140mm of front and rear suspension, the Wild Cup is a true all mountain ride. We were a little apprehensive on ordering a bike site unseen for a long term test, but our fears were proven to be unfounded.

The Wild Cup uses an industry standard suspension design called four-bar, split pivot linkage. This allows for excellent small bump management when you’re pedaling uphill. We often found ourselves pleasantly surprised at how well our back tire stayed glued to the dirt, even on chunky, dusty ascents. On the downhill is where the Wild Cup shines though. With split linkage, there can be a little brake jack – premature flexing at the pivots and shock – when really flying down the trail, but we were very impressed with the shock tune on the rear shock; it evened out performance on both small roots and rocks and larger drops on our favorite after work ride.

Weighing in just over thirty pounds, it is not the lightest all-mountain trail bike, but the nimble 27.5-inch wheels combined with a slack 68-degree head tube give it excellent handling. It is not a purpose built cross country race rocket, nor a dedicated downhill sled. Rather, the Wild Cup is a do-anything workhorse that will have you chasing switchbacks and long climbs all day.

The component build – a full Shimano SLX drivetrain really packs in serious reliability – at this price point is what really sells us. Between the Shimano components and the Rockshox Sektor Gold fork up front, a similar bike from your local bike shop or online will easily be hundreds of dollars more. A smooth ride, clean design, and extra cash for a weekend at your favorite mountain getaway? The choice seems pretty easy. All we can say is we’re glad that BULLS is here to stay. If you’re looking for a bike to beat on daily, the Wild Cup 2 is enough bike to charge down any trail.

Austin Parker
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Austin Parker is a former contributor at The Manual Parker is a powder skier and sport climber and is no stranger hauling…
onX and Toyota join forces for nationwide trail cleanup and revival project
Our national public lands are under unprecedented threat. Now you can chip in to do something about it.
Three men clearing a trail with the onX/Toyota Trail Revival Project.

Our public lands face unprecedented threats right now. Massive funding cuts have fueled staff shortages at every National Park Service, and the trails and backcountry roads of every NPS unit are suffering. Thankfully, onX joined forces with Toyota to do something about it via a nationwide trail cleanup and revival project.

Beginning next month and throughout the summer, the two brands are rallying local communities to work together at five (for now) events in California, Colorado, Montana, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania. The goal is to address some of the biggest threats to our favorite outdoor spaces, namely the loss of access to trails due to overuse, deterioration, and under-resourced land management organizations. onX and Toyota will provide the resources, including trucks, safety gear, clean-up equipment (think chainsaws), and whatever other tools volunteers might need to clear out trail debris and trash. Volunteers will bring the brawn to get it all done.

Read more
Going to the Great Smoky Mountains? The upcoming dates you should avoid
Great Smoky Mountains to have road maintenance in May
Great Smoky Mountains National Park sunset view

Great Smoky Mountains National Park just announced a series of road maintenance projects to take place throughout the month of May. These initiatives will particularly affect the road along the Spur, which is the roadway that connects Gatlinburg to Pigeon Forge. In order to ensure as little disruption as possible for visitors to the park, the National Park Service are implementing a series of temporary single-lane closures.

This maintenance is routine, and will include activities like mowing, ditch cleaning, fallen tree and branch removal, and litter pickup. This way, the Sur will remain safe and scenic for the 2025 season. Here are the dates:

Read more
27North unveils the Venture X campervan built for luxurious off-road adventuring
With more creature comforts and tech than most studio apartments, you'll never feel like you're "roughing it"
27North all-black Venture X adventure campervan parked in a garage.

For hardcore overlanders who can't bear to be without their creature comforts, we're living in a Golden Age of high-tech, off-road-ready rigs. Missouri's 27North has been at the forefront of the modern overlanding movement, and it's all-new Venture X campervan is a testament to that.

The Venture X joins 27North's line-up of ultra-modern and downright "luxurious" overlanding vehicles, including the Ascender and RexRover pickup truck campers. It's a tech-forward adventure van designed for all levels of overlander, from first-timers to families. Underpinned by the industry-standard Mercedes-Benz Sprinter 170 platform, powered by a 4-cylinder high-output diesel, it rides and drives easy on-road, while the standard AWD system and all-terrain tires ensure it can tackle off-road trails, too. The company's Adventure Package adds a 50-inch light bar, ditch lights, a rooftop tent, and more to the mix, making this a seriously capable go-anywhere campervan.

Read more