Most reviews of the Mizuno Wave Sky 8 will tell you it is a smooth, well-cushioned daily trainer. That is true and useless. Every shoe in this category is smooth and well-cushioned. The honest review separates which of those shoes belong in your rotation and which are just taking up shelf space at Decathlon. The Wave Sky 8 lands in India at ₹15,499 with a 41 mm heel stack, 8 mm drop, 320 g per shoe, and Mizuno's Enerzy NXT foam. The interesting question is not whether it cushions well. The interesting question is who, in 2026, should buy a 320 g daily trainer.
The weight problem nobody wants to talk about
320 g per shoe is heavy. Not catastrophically heavy. Heavier than the Magnify Nitro 2 at 295 g, heavier than the Saucony Triumph 22, heavier than the Asics Nimbus 26. In a market obsessed with lightness, Mizuno chose mass. That is a deliberate decision and the deciding factor for whether this shoe belongs in your rotation.
Heavy shoes feel slow. They also feel stable, planted, and reassuring on long runs over broken Indian tarmac. The trade-off is real and it cuts both ways. Light runners chasing PBs hate this shoe. Heavy runners over 80 kg pounding out base mileage love it. Most reviews refuse to draw that line. I just did.
The Indian road argument for heavier shoes
Indian roads are not European roads. They have potholes, gravel patches, broken edges, and seam joints that throw your foot off-balance every few hundred metres. A 320 g shoe absorbs more of that chaos than a 270 g shoe does. The 41 mm heel stack adds another buffer.
If your weekly long run takes you through Bangalore service lanes, Mumbai suburb cross-streets, or any major Indian city without dedicated running paths, weight is not a bug. It is a feature. The 320 g feels reassuring at km 25 when your form starts to deteriorate. Try our gear shoes index for the full category breakdown.
The Enerzy NXT foam question
Mizuno's Enerzy NXT is a PEBA-based foam with a softer feel than first-generation Enerzy. It bounces back well, holds up through long runs, and resists the mushy compression that plagues some softer EVAs after 300 km. That is the good news.
The bad news is that Enerzy NXT does not have the explosive return of the PEBA foams in race shoes. This is not a complaint. The Wave Sky 8 is not a race shoe. It is a max-cushion daily trainer, and the foam is tuned for cushioning, not propulsion. Asking for both is asking for a unicorn.
How the foam holds up in Indian heat
PEBA foams generally soften in high heat. Enerzy NXT is no exception. On runs above 30°C, the foam compresses a touch more than usual, giving a slightly mushier feel. This is not failure. It is normal PEBA behaviour. Plan long runs for cooler windows in summer months — sunrise or post-sunset — to keep the foam responding the way Mizuno tuned it.
The 8 mm drop conversation
The Wave Sky 8 runs an 8 mm drop. That is the modern middle ground. Lower than the 10 mm drops of older Mizuno shoes, higher than the 4 to 6 mm drops of newer race shoes. It is a sensible compromise that fits most Indian runners' biomechanics.
If you have transitioned from older 10 mm Mizunos, the 8 mm will feel slightly more aggressive on the forefoot. If you have come from 4 mm Hoka Cliftons, the 8 mm will feel slightly more traditional. Either way, the difference is real but adapts within a week of normal use. Pair this against current rivals in our super-shoe comparison for 2026 if you want a cross-brand view.
Who the drop suits
Mid-foot strikers and heel strikers both get a clean ride at 8 mm. Forefoot strikers will feel the height but adapt fast. Runners with a history of Achilles tendinopathy benefit from the moderate drop that reduces tendon loading compared to a 4 mm shoe.
The honest comparison list
Let me name the competitors directly because too many reviews dance around this. The Wave Sky 8 competes against the Asics Nimbus 26 at ₹16,999 to ₹18,999, the Hoka Skyflow at ₹16,000 to ₹18,000, the Puma Magnify Nitro 2 at ₹12,999, and the Saucony Triumph 22 in its India price band.
Each shoe wins on something. The Nimbus 26 has the softest landing feel. The Skyflow has the highest stack. The Magnify Nitro 2 has the lowest price. The Wave Sky 8 has the most stable, planted ride for heavier runners and rougher roads. Our shoe comparison tool matches them side by side on specs.
Pick on use case, not on review scores. A 5/5 shoe in a review is a 3/5 shoe if it does not match your stride and your weekly mileage.
The honest verdict on the Wave Sky 8
Buy the Wave Sky 8 if you are over 75 kg, running 30 to 60 km per week, training for a half marathon or marathon, and most of your mileage is on rough Indian city roads. The 41 mm stack, 8 mm drop, and 320 g weight combine into a shoe that absorbs more abuse than the lighter options in this category.
Skip the Wave Sky 8 if you are under 65 kg, focused on faster paces, or value lightness on your easy runs. The shoe does what it does well. It does not pretend to be light. Do not buy it expecting otherwise.
The category bigger picture
Max-cushion daily trainers are a category most Indian runners do not need but most Indian running publications recommend buying. Build your rotation around two shoes first: one balanced daily trainer, one tempo or plated trainer. Add a max-cushion shoe like the Wave Sky 8 only when your weekly mileage and your roads justify it.
If you are running 25 km a week, a single daily trainer is enough. The Wave Sky 8 sits unused for most of the week and never earns its price. If you are running 50 km plus on broken roads, the Wave Sky 8 becomes a tool that protects you across the cumulative load of a marathon block.
Where to buy and what to verify
Mizuno India sells through their flagship online store and selected offline retailers in Mumbai, Bengaluru, Delhi, and Hyderabad. Tata Cliq stocks select models. Check the model number on the box reads Wave Sky 8 — the Wave Sky 7 is still in circulation at clearance prices and has different geometry. Read our Mizuno archive for the full lineup before committing.
The plan-first argument I keep making
A shoe is only as useful as the training that surrounds it. Build the plan first. Buy the shoe to serve the plan. The STRIDD plan generator sets the volume, the workouts, and the race goal that turn the Wave Sky 8 into a tool rather than a shelf decoration.
The Wave Sky 8 is a good shoe. It is a great shoe for a specific runner. Be honest about whether you are that runner before you spend ₹15,499.