While most on-snow industry demo day events for retailers are  generally populated by the big-10 brands (Head, Kastle, K2, Elan,  Dynastar, Fischer, Rossignol, Line...etc.), trying to get retailers to  commit to ordering their products for the next season, several smaller  (sometimes downright tiny brands) invest in buying tent space, tents,  hotel rooms, meals and putting staff and product in front of retailers  in hopes they can get some penetration into the brick-and-mortar stores  around the country.  Some only sell into retail stores, while others  pursue a hybrid model of direct-to-consumer over the Internet as well as  brick-and-mortar retail models. Every season, there are some brave  newcomer ski companies to the retailer demo day events, as well as some  regulars who show up each year.
Here is a quick sampling of first-impressions of some skis found at  the Stratton event in February, 2018.  These are not really "reviews" ,  but notes taken during the "speed dating" sessions of taking 2 or 3 runs  on each ski, then moving on to another pair...rinse and repeat...for 3  days straight. Someone has to do it.... ;-)
Conditions:
3 Days.
Day 1 = groomed, dry, packed powder and excellent hardpack carving surfaces in some places. Excellent visibility and conditions.
Day 2 = 12 inches of fresh fluff overnight continuing during the day...low visibility, awesome pow day.
Day 3 = "Day after the storm" conditions with powder, cut-up powder,  groomed and ungroomed areas. Excellent visibility and conditions. No  hardpack.
DPS Cassiar 79 Alchemist "The Trainer" 167cm $1299

This carbon-infused narrow carver from DPS is super fun, sporty,  quick and zippy for the groomer-only crowd.  Surprisingly stable for its  width and length.  Can produce multiple turn shapes and radii easily.   Great carving instruction ski since it has a high degree of accuracy and  response when delivering carved turn on packed surfaces, but does not  require race-ski levels of attention. 
Very light feel underfoot, yet has a surgical grip on the snow with  good vibration dampening.  Auto-completes its turns once you initiate it  and press the midbody of the ski into the snow. Not a race ski, but a  technical carver for those who don't want a race-carver mass and  resistance underfoot.  Can become a bit shaken at high speeds on  boilerplate.  Totally fun on squeeky tight manmade surfaces. 
Everyone should have one of these in their quiver to remind them how  much fun groomers can be when there is no fresh snow to be had  anywhere.  Instructors teaching people to carve will find this tool  extremely useful to demonstrate carving progression at speeds students  can follow carefully on the hill.  Nice work and completely confounding  for hard-core DPS fans who don't understand DPS's venture into carving  geometries when the Wailer & Lotus models are so addicting.

 
 
DPS Cassiar 87 Alchemist 178cm  $1299
DPS Cassiar 82 Alchemist 178cm  $1299

I'm lumping these together since they are so similar, but have a  distinct difference in only a few behaviors.  These are technical  carvers with composure under pressure and speeds their Foundation  siblings lack.  (We've been testing the Cassiar F82 and F87 in Vermont  the last month or so and will have full reviews soon...stay tuned).  The  Alchemist layup for 2018-2019 really achieves DPS's quest to quiet  their carbon-infused ski behavior and underfoot feel down to levels  acceptable by the masses.  Pure 3 was a pretty good advancement over  their original carbon pre-peg construction, but still "tinny", "abrupt",  "too-much-feedback" or "too high-energy" for some people.  The newest  Alchemist construction really shuts down all the characteristics any  nay-sayers found objectionable or uncomfortable, yet delivers a chassis  with great energy and ability to take lots of pressure with quiet  composure to give a top-performance, carbon-enhanced response  underfoot.  The C87 and C82 in Alchemist layup are sold-feeling  underfoot, with a quiet, almost vague feeling until you get them  engaged, at which point they communicate an accurate, crisp feel on-edge  telling you exactly what kind of surface your riding across, and can  change radii at will into a variety of nicely shaped turns.  Both models  can take expert-level pressure really well without faltering and are  not too picky about surface conditions, as long as you keep them out of  deeper snow, where their width is a drawback. 

I found the C87 more versatile than the C82 because the C82 had some  tight turn shapes it likes...but really wants to stay inside its SL-like  behavior envelope more than running at cruising-speeds, while the C87  liked pretty much everything from tight turns to cruising at various  speeds.  Both skis have a highly accurate feel to them to keep technical  skiers happy, and perform really well, but not in a really exciting way  like DPS's previous Hybrid Cassiar 85 did for us.  These are great  packed-surface technical carvers when built with the Alchemist layup,  but somewhat disappointing in the Foundation construction.  For the  price jump of $799 to $1,299, I would ignore the Foundations and invest  in the Alchemists...no hesitation.  You have to try the C82 and C87 for  yourself to see if you like their personalities.  I personally liked the  Alchemists a whole lot, but was disenchanted with the Foundations.
 
DPS Wailer 106 Alchemist $1,299

DPS's Wailer 106 in Alchemist construction is a rippingly good  all-terrain tool that can surf with totally acceptable civility through  soft and mixed conditions, yet trench arcs into firmer and inconsistent  surfaces with solid authority under intense pressures without ever  yielding.  Tons of skiers are swearing by the the Wailer 106 as a true  all-mountain ski with professional prowess, and in the Alchemist carbon  construction, I agree. I found I could ski it fairly lazily and never  experience any protest underfoot, yet it begged to be driven into  high-edge-angle situations under as much pressure as I could deliver at  higher speeds while remainging quiet and confident. 

The highly responsive Alchemist construction delivered an energetic  and active ski in mixed conditions, but never darty or deflective.  You  can hold a solid line through pretty much any crappy snow at will with  the Wailer 106 Alchemist.  Zero deflection. More directional than surfy.  There's lots of power and energy on tap, and it's remarkably agile for a  106mm waisted ski.  Hard snow grip is probably best-in-class ( even  with the Renoun Citadel 106 coming next year...but a different feel).   This is an addicting ski for athletic or technically-inclined  all-mountain enthusiasts who like to actively drive a ski rather than  passively ride it. Worth every penny. I love this ski every time I try  it.
 
Stöckli Laser SX 170cm $1,199

OK. This ski is a dangerously addicting drug you need to avoid if you  can't afford the habit. The Stöckli SX should be one of the World's  reference standards for its no-holds-barred, simply stunning ability to  grip a hard surface and deliver an authoritative, unwaivering,  super-solid, ultra-confident arc at intense pressures perfectly. Case  closed.  The damp, yet powerfully energetic body of this ski has a  viciously silky grip on the surface and begs to be bent and released  on-edge over and over again, increasing pressure each time until the  skier cries uncle or ends up in the weeds...whichever comes first....or  at the same time...  I fell in love with this ski since it was fresh out  of the wrapper, just mounted and released for the first time on snow  under my feet at the demo event (well, I might have been the third  person on it).  Superbly intuitive turn initiation, feed-through and  finish under varying pressure levels with elegant authority and  confidence. It begs to be put on edge right away and feels unfamiliar  when running flat.  Tip it over and drive it, or tip it over and let  your weight sink into the center of the ski, and it delivers an  addicting ride no technical skier can resist.  This is a ski that could  make hard-core freeride-only purists wear a disguise and wait in line  for the first chair for fresh corduroy days, then tell their friends  they has a dentist appointment and couldn't make runs with them that  morning.  Don't get lazy on the Laser SX. Simply stunning.
 
Stöckli Laser AX 170cm $1,199

This is a "more civilized" version of the SX with a 78mm waist  instead of the 70mm waist found on the SX, along with a teeny-weeny bit  of tip rocker.  The radius is 15.9m instead of 15.4 and the ski utilizes  a "turtle shell comfort" layup feature rather than "turtle shell  racing" feature to modify how the Titanal layers interact during  flexing.  The result is a ski with incredibly intense grip and composure  under pressure, with a slighly less-demanding personality, letting you  start your turn with a little more delay before engagement and a little  more forgiving hookup before you get to the slot-car-like grip  underfoot. 
Think of it as the high-end race-carver for the slightly less  obsessed fanatic who needs something that won't punish lazy behavior so  instantly.  The SX is a marvel in smooth, fluid grip for frontside  groomer addicts. Great feel and race-carver-like performance.
 
Sego Cleaver 88 176cm $879
Sego Bighorn 106 187cm $799

Sego skis is a small craft ski builder from Victor, Idaho trying to  penetrate the retailers with their brand as an alternative to the big-10  ski companies typically found in retail shops. They also sell  direct-to-consumer.  The Cleaver 88 is their frontside carver with an  unusual amount of rockered tip rise for a groomer-oriented ski, making  it ski shorter than its measurements would indicate. It had a really  decent grip when you wanted it, but had a defintely surfy personality  rather than frontside-carver personality.  The Cleaver 88 has a Titanal  stringer, and was very playful, quick and eager, feeling like a more  surfy, western 88m ski rather than a grippy, carve-oriented Eastern  frontside ski.  Damp and poppy and a bundle of fun...but definitely  short-feeling...size up on this one.  Build quality looked pretty good,  graphics were kinda ho-hum minimalist.
The Sego Bighorn 106 is their "playful all-mountain ski" with a  definite Western bias for soft snow rather than Eastern conditions.  The  hardpack grip lacked authority, and mixed conditions were a blast due  to the surfy nature of this fairly well-rockered design.  Like its  Cleaver sibling, the Bighorn was damp and quiet, with a fun, surfy and  playful personality in mixed conditions but came up short of most other  106mm waisted skis in gripping performance.

 
Meier High Noon 98 175cm $750

Meier is another small ski builder trying to penetrate  brick-and-mortar retailers with its brand as well as sell  direct-to-consumer via its website.  The High Noon is their all-mountain  offering just under 100mm underfoot having a surprisingly quick  response and edge-to-edge transfer speed. It has a distinctive forebody  float with pretty good grip underfoot and in the tail with good playful  feel in a light chassis. Some skis in the Meier lineup can fell a bit  dull, while others are responsive and lively.  This one is lively and  worth a demo if you can hook up with them at their many demo events. 
Libtech Wunderstick 96 182cm $699

Libtech's ultra-ecologically sensitive manufacturing facility is a  big deal to Mervin's brand, and their unique "Magna-Traction" wavy edge  feature has been a selling point for years.  The new Wunderstick 96 is  billed as all-mountain daily driver, but I found it lacked grip on hard  surfaces, while feeling fun, loose and semi-surfy. 
The geometry felt a bit odd in the way it didn't finish the turn as  expected.  The chassis itself was nicely damp and felt solid, but the  lack of grip and odd turn finish behavior left me wondering what this  ski was supposed to do really well.
Scott Slight 83 178cm $699

This is one of the coolest looking skis with its machined metal  inserts embedded into the sections of the layups, as well as tip and  tail, and felt super light underfoot, but was unstable at speed.  It  almost felt like a touring ski was dressed up to go downhill in alpine  mode, but didn't get the upgrades it needed to perform strongly.


Icelantic Sabre 80 180cm $599
Icelantic Sabre 89 180cm $599

Normally, I like the Icelantic feel with a damp and playful  personality, but the Sabre series disappointed me compared to other skis  of similar widths at the event.
Liberty V76 $699
Liberty V82 $749
Liberty V92 $799

Dan Chalfant is the driving force behind Liberty's  designs, and for 2018-2019, Liberty is launching an entirely new line of  frontside-oriented technical carvers called the "V Series" in 76, 82  and 92mm widths underfoot.  These essentially replace the old "Variant"  series of freeride skis infused with carving abilities. I tried them all  and was stunned at what Liberty (most often thought of as the creator  of the popular, surfy Helix and Origin series of skis) has delivered for  hardpack skiers. Quite simply, I loved every model of the V Series  carvers. 

These are ripping frontside carvers capable of dead-serious  race-carver turns on hard surfaces with confident, quiet and quick  behaviors.  Liberty is resurrecting a construction technique previously  found in DPS's carvers where vertical ribs of metal are embedded into  the bamboo-poplar core.  Bottom line: if you like carving on packed  surfaces, demo these new Liberty skis.  They feel damp and controlled  without being heavy, while delivering an energetic response and agility  and great turn shapes that auto-complete as you ride them through their  arcs.  They can be ridden casually, but crave to be driven into  high-angle situations under pressure.  These things are fun and take  Liberty into a brand-new market.  Their graphics are handsome and  attractive with good rack-appeal for retailers. It's exciting when a ski  company delivers a really capable ski into a category they previously  omitted from their lineup. Great stuff.
Liberty Origin 112 184cm

Liberty dropped the Orgin 116 for the narrower, and spunkier Origin  112 design introduced with a modified carbon infusion in the layup and  all-new geometry.  The result is a stout, sporty-feeling 112mm waisted  ski with lots of rebound energy and a higher degree of feedback  underfoot than previous Liberty models.  The Origin 112 has a good  degree of grip along its edge once it's rolled up and pressured into the  surface, and maintains a surfy forebody with more directional feel in  the midbody and tail than the previous Origin 116.  The new Origin 112  is not a subtle ski and appears aimed directly at an athletic, faster  skier type than the 116 was. 

The new 112 has very good power handling ability and is quick on its  feet, yielding a somewhat "active" feel at higher speeds, yet fairly  damp when under pressure. Definitely get a ride on the 112 and see what  you think of Liberty's new personality.  The Origin 112 is a hopped-up  version of the niche the 116 previously occupied.
Liberty Helix 98 186cm $499

OK, the $499 MSRP is not a typo.  The guys at the Liberty demo tent  said..."yeah...you REALLY need to try THIS..." This could be the bargain  of the season for people looking for a directional, GS-like  all-mountain jib or comp ski that loves to ride big turns at high speeds  as smooth as glass.  I was blown away at the secure and confident high  speed turns the Helix 98 can deliver. It feels rock-solid and  fully-engaged when pressed into an arc, and can handle tons of pressure  with silky response and authority...something I did not expect from  Liberty's Helix lineup.  It almost feels like a traditionally-shaped  ski, but its bamboo-poplar core, slight tip rocker and long camber  section underfoot gives it a modern feel without the burden of a  fully-cambered carving design.  This ski rips at speed and doesn't care  about crud or junky conditions..it just holds its line like its being  pulled on a string.  Tight conditions reveal this ski is stout underfoot  and is not a flexible flyer, so a strong pilot will get the best  results in bumpy or tight terrain. At $499, you'd be crazy to not try it  as an all-mountain ripper. "Wow" was the only word I had to describe it  to the Reps at the Liberty tent....they all just shook their heads in  agreement when I came back with my mouth hanging open.
Black Crows Corvus 183cm $749

Black Crows is taking the World by storm with a killer social media  campaign, catchy, addictive graphics, hot-shot athletes and brand  ambassadors all focused on a wide variety of models that seem to hit the  mark for each category they represent.  The 2018-19 Corvus model is  billed as their 107mm big mountain crusher with the addition of a new  3/4 length Titanal metal layer to bump up the stability and dampening of  this popular ski. I found the Corvus to be super solid and quiet  underfoot with a grip approaching that of the class-leading DPS Wailer  106 Alchemist, but with a slightly more surfy and loose feel to make it  more nimble and less demanding in tight situations. 

Great power handling ability under pressure and a feeling of engaging  the entire ski on-edge when depressing it into a turn.  A grippy and  agile crud cutter.  I can see why people love this ski.  Plus, they  print cool phrases into their sidewalls on each model.