The Nike Streakfly 2 at ₹14,995 and the Skechers GoRun Speed Beast at ₹11,999 share a 6 mm drop and roughly the same stack height, and that is where the similarities stop. The Streakfly 2 weighs 175 grams, runs on ZoomX foam, and carries no plate at all. The Speed Beast weighs 240 grams, runs on Hyperburst Pro foam, and seats a carbon-infused winglet plate in the forefoot. The Streakfly is built for short-race and track work. The Speed Beast is built for the marathon. Calling either of them simply a "lightweight racer" is the kind of category laziness that costs Indian runners ₹12,000 to ₹15,000 on the wrong tool. The honest comparison is below.
The verified specs, side by side
Test before you trust. The numbers below are from Nike's and Skechers' own 2026 product pages, and they decide the rest of this article.
| Spec | Nike Streakfly 2 | Skechers GoRun Speed Beast |
|---|---|---|
| Category | Lightweight daily | Carbon-plate race shoe |
| Drop | 6 mm | 6 mm |
| Heel stack | 32 mm | 30 mm |
| Forefoot stack | 26 mm | 24 mm |
| Weight (US 9) | 175 g | 240 g |
| Foam | ZoomX | Hyperburst Pro |
| Plate | None | Carbon-infused (forefoot) |
| Best for | Short-race / track racing | Marathon racing |
| India price | ₹14,995 | ₹11,999 |
Read that table once and the argument is half-resolved. The Streakfly 2 is 65 grams lighter. The Speed Beast carries the plate. The price gap is ₹2,996. The drop is identical, the stacks are within two millimetres of each other, and yet these are different propositions for different distances. Use the head-to-head shoe compare if you want every dimension stacked up; the table above is the load-bearing one.
Weight, plate and the distance question
The first thing any honest racing-shoe review should isolate is the trade-off between weight and propulsion. The Streakfly 2 wins on weight: 175 grams is genuinely featherweight territory, the kind of mass that disappears under the foot for a 5K, a 10K, or a track session. ZoomX is among the most rebound-dense supercritical foams on the market. With no plate to govern the bend pattern, the Streakfly lets the foot drive its own toe-off cycle. For runners whose engine sits in the 17 to 22 minute 5K band, that disappear-and-let-me-run feel is the whole point.
The Speed Beast trades 65 grams for a carbon-infused winglet plate in the forefoot. That plate is the difference. Over a 5K, the extra weight tells against it; over 42.2 kilometres, the plate's contribution to toe-off snap and the forefoot's bending governance is what keeps the late-race form honest. Hyperburst Pro is the same supercritical foam that anchors the Razor 4, and on a wider, more stable midsole platform it is calibrated for the cumulative-impact problem a marathon presents.
The empirical claim is this: at distances under 10 kilometres, the Streakfly's 65-gram weight advantage matters more than any forefoot plate. At distances over 21 kilometres, the Speed Beast's plate matters more than 65 grams of carried weight. The crossover sits somewhere in the half-marathon range, where individual runner physiology decides the winner. The Streakfly 2 review goes deeper on the no-plate feel; the Speed Beast review goes deeper on the plate's behaviour.
Foam behaviour and the Indian race calendar
ZoomX has earned its reputation by being measurably more energy-returning than the foams that came before it. In the Streakfly 2, the 32 mm heel stack of ZoomX is calibrated to give a 5K and 10K runner a propulsive ride without the firm-floor sensation of older lightweight racers. The trade-off is durability: ZoomX in lightweight applications is famously not a high-mileage compound. Treat the Streakfly 2 as a short-race specialist and a few sessions of track work, and the foam will see you through a calendar year. Use it as a daily trainer and the rebound will fade faster than the price tag justifies.
Hyperburst Pro is a supercritical foam optimised for the marathon-distance use case. In the Speed Beast it sits on a wider, more stable platform than most carbon racers, which is why the shoe holds form for the kind of runner whose pace drifts a little in the closing 10 kilometres of a 42 K. The forefoot plate stabilises the bend; the foam absorbs the cumulative impact load. For the Indian marathon calendar — Mumbai in January, Delhi in November, Bengaluru in October, Hyderabad in August, Chennai in December, and the cooler hill-station and Northeast slots — the Speed Beast is a credible race-day tool at the ₹11,999 price point.
For an Indian 10K specialist running the Pinkathon, Vedanta Delhi Half's 10K, the Tata Mumbai Marathon's 10K relay, or the campus-level track meet calendar, the Streakfly 2 at ₹14,995 is built for those distances. It is the lighter tool, the foam-only tool, and the toe-off feel is what 5K and 10K runners pay for.
Where each shoe wins, by use case
Headline first: there is no single winner because there is no single distance.
The Nike Streakfly 2 wins for the runner targeting 5K and 10K personal bests, the track athlete in the 1500 to 5000 metre band, the half-marathon specialist whose finishing time is under 1:25, and the runner who already owns a marathon racer and wants a lighter short-race weapon to round out the rotation. The 175-gram weight, the ZoomX foam, and the plate-free ride are the spec sheet of a short-distance specialist tool. The ₹14,995 price reflects ZoomX's premium and Nike's brand position.
The Skechers GoRun Speed Beast wins for the runner targeting the marathon distance in the 2:50 to 3:30 finishing band, the first-time marathoner stepping up from the half who wants a forgiving carbon racer, the half-marathoner whose race calendar runs through to a goal marathon, and the runner who wants a single carbon racer at ₹11,999 rather than a top-tier super-shoe at ₹20,000-plus. The 240-gram weight is the trade-off; the carbon-infused forefoot plate and the Hyperburst Pro foam are the payoff.
For Indian runners chasing a sub-2:45 marathon, neither shoe is the optimal weapon. The top-tier super-shoe category — Vaporfly, Alphafly, Adios Pro — sits above both. For Indian runners on an easy-pace daily mileage diet, neither shoe is the right tool either; a cushioned daily trainer earns that mileage better. The Streakfly 2 and the Speed Beast are race-day and key-session tools, not daily-mileage workhorses. Browse Nike's racing lineup or Skechers' racing lineup for the wider context.
The verdict, plainly
If your race is short and fast, take the Nike Streakfly 2 at ₹14,995. Buy it through Nike India's site or authorised retailers. The 175-gram weight, the ZoomX foam and the no-plate ride are precisely calibrated for 5K and 10K work. If your race is the marathon, take the Skechers GoRun Speed Beast at ₹11,999. Buy it through Skechers India or authorised partners. The carbon-infused forefoot plate and the Hyperburst Pro foam are calibrated for 42 kilometres of cumulative-impact management.
The ₹2,996 price gap is real but secondary. Choose the tool for the distance, not the saving. And before you finalise either pair, build the block around it. Run the STRIDD plan generator for a 5K, 10K, half or marathon training plan that matches the shoe to a real block of training, and browse Running Lab for the broader gear context. The shoe is the smallest decision in a race calendar. The training that earns the start line is the largest.