Most write-ups will hand you the Brooks Hyperion Elite 4 as “Brooks finally has a real super-shoe.” That framing is lazy, and it misreads what is in front of you. The honest version is sharper: this is a 215-gram carbon racer that earns its ₹22,999 only on the two or three mornings a year you actually race a marathon flat-out. I am buying every shoe category fresh again after years away from running, so I have no loyalty to defend here. The Hyperion Elite 4 is a brilliant tool for a narrow job, and a waste of money for everyone using it as a daily ego boost.
Let us pick the fight nobody in an Indian running store wants to pick. A carbon plate does not make you fast. Training makes you fast. The plate makes a fast runner slightly more economical on race day. If you are reading this hoping the shoe rescues an undertrained marathon, save the money and put it into a coach. If you are reading this because you have a genuine goal race in the next twelve weeks and the legs to match, keep going.
What the Hyperion Elite 4 actually is
Strip the marketing and read the spec sheet. The Hyperion Elite 4 is a carbon-plate race shoe with an 8 mm drop, a 40 mm heel and 32 mm forefoot stack, a 215-gram weight in US 9, a DNA Flash v2 midsole, and a carbon SpeedVault plate. Intended use, by Brooks’ own positioning: marathon race day. Not your Tuesday recovery jog. Not your gym shoe. Marathon race day.
That 215-gram figure is the headline. For a full-stack carbon racer it is genuinely light, and on the back nine of a marathon, mass you are no longer swinging is mass you do not have to pay for. The 40/32 mm stack sits right in the modern super-shoe band — tall enough to carry four-figure footstrike counts across 42.195 km, engineered to work with the plate rather than just pile on foam.
The DNA Flash v2 and SpeedVault combination
DNA Flash v2 is Brooks’ nitrogen-infused race foam. The job of a race foam is not to feel plush in the showroom. It is to give back energy at race pace, repeatedly, without packing out before the finish line. The carbon SpeedVault plate is the lever: it stiffens the platform so your toe-off does not collapse into the foam, and it smooths the roll-through when your form starts fraying around kilometre 32.
Here is the part the spec-chart reviewers skip. An 8 mm drop on a 40 mm stack is a deliberate choice, not an afterthought. It gives you a touch more heel under load than the 4-6 mm racers, which most Indian recreational marathoners — heel-and-midfoot strikers, not elite forefoot dancers — will quietly thank the shoe for at hour three. Do not let anyone tell you a higher drop is “old-fashioned.” It is the right call for the runner this shoe is actually sold to.
Who should buy it, and who should walk away
Three runners should buy the Hyperion Elite 4. First, the marathoner with a real time goal and a real race date — Tata Mumbai in January, a destination marathon, a Boston-qualifying attempt, who has put in a full block. Second, the runner already loyal to Brooks fit and geometry who wants a race-day tool that matches the daily trainers they trust. Third, the half-marathon and 10K racer building toward a marathon who wants one carbon shoe to cover the fast end of the calendar.
Now the part brands hate. Walk away if you run easy mileage and want “something bouncy” — you are about to spend ₹22,999 to wear out a race foam on recovery runs. Walk away if you have never trained in a plated shoe and expect to debut it on race morning; the calf and Achilles need a few sessions to read the plate first. Walk away if your marathon is a finish-line celebration rather than a time chase. A good daily trainer serves you better and leaves ₹10,000 in your pocket. The wider Running Lab shoe index has the distance-matched options.
Where to buy it in India, and the trap to dodge
Buy the Hyperion Elite 4 from the official Brooks India site or a Brooks-authorised retailer. That is the whole list. A carbon racer lives or dies on a genuine midsole, and the marketplace listing quoting you a fat discount on a “sealed” pair is the single fastest way to buy a counterfeit or a phantom shipment. Carbon race shoes are among the most faked running products in Indian online retail, and a fake plate under a real-looking upper is not a bargain — it is an injury waiting six months to introduce itself.
At ₹22,999 the Hyperion Elite 4 sits in the same elite-racer band as the Nike, Adidas and Asics flagships. It is not cheap. It is priced like what it is. Cross-check the brand-direct price the day you buy and treat anything more than a token discount from an unverified seller as a red flag, not a win.
Durability and the Indian-conditions question
Be honest with yourself about lifespan. This is a race shoe, not a high-mileage workhorse. Treat it like one. Reserve it for goal races and the two or three race-pace tune-up runs that rehearse them, and the DNA Flash v2 foam holds its character far longer because it simply spends fewer hours under load. Burn it on daily mileage and you will halve its useful racing life.
Indian conditions add their own asterisks. High-rebound race foams soften in heat, so a 28-degree humid Hyderabad morning is not the cool lab the energy-return graphs were drawn in — you keep most of the benefit, not all of it. Post-monsoon damp degrades any race foam faster, so dry the shoe fully between outings and store it somewhere ventilated, never sealed in a kit bag. None of this is a Brooks-specific flaw. It is the tax every carbon racer pays in India.
How it stacks up, and the honest verdict
Against the rest of the 2026 super-shoe field, the Hyperion Elite 4’s argument is its 215-gram weight and Brooks’ fit, not a claim of being the single fastest shoe on earth. If you already race well in Nike or Adidas geometry, there is no rule saying you must switch. If Brooks fits your foot and you want a light, stable, full-stack racer, this belongs on your shortlist. The 2026 super-shoe comparison places it in the field, and the shoe comparison tool runs it head-to-head on weight, stack and drop. Start from the Brooks shoe lineup if you want to see where it sits against the brand’s daily trainers.
The verdict is simple. The Brooks Hyperion Elite 4 is a serious, light, well-built carbon marathon racer that is worth ₹22,999 to a runner with a real race and the training behind it — and a poor purchase for anyone buying a feeling. Decide which one you are before you tap pay. Then build the block that earns the shoe with the STRIDD plan generator, because the plate is the last five percent. The first ninety-five is the work.