Most articles will tell you the Reebok Nano X4 is a great shoe for everything from running to lifting. The honest answer is the Nano X4 is a Hyrox and functional-fitness specialist that pretends to be a running shoe in marketing, and pretending otherwise misleads buyers. At 290 g, 7 mm drop, 22/15 mm stack on Floatride Energy + EVA foam with no plate, at ₹13,999 in India, this is a specific tool for a specific purpose. Run anywhere outside that purpose and you are using the wrong shoe.
The Nano X4 is not a running shoe
Let me pick the fight directly. The Nano X4 lives in retail listings under "training shoes," which is a category that bundles every shoe that is not a pure running specialist. The Nano X4's design intent — confirmed by Reebok's own positioning and the verified specs — is Hyrox and functional fitness. The 22/15 mm stack is too low for serious running. The 290 g weight is heavy for any running purpose. The Floatride Energy + EVA foam is tuned more for lateral stability than longitudinal compression.
That does not make the Nano X4 a bad shoe. It makes the marketing misleading when retailers shelf it next to road running shoes. If you bought the Nano X4 expecting a daily trainer, you bought the wrong shoe. Hold the retailer to that mistake, not the product.
What Hyrox is and why it matters here
Hyrox is a hybrid fitness race that combines 1 km runs with functional fitness stations (rowing, sled push, burpees, sandbag carries). The race demands a shoe that can run 8 km cumulatively across short segments and also handle heavy compound movements. That is a specific design problem. The Nano X4 is built for it. A traditional running shoe is not.
Hyrox events in India have grown meaningfully. Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, and Pune have all hosted Hyrox events. If you race Hyrox, the Nano X4 is on the shortlist. If you do not, you are buying solutions to a problem you do not have.
The case against using the Nano X4 as a runner
Take the published research at face value. A 2020 review by Hoogkamer in Sports Medicine confirmed that lighter shoes improve running economy. The Nano X4 at 290 g is heavier than every dedicated daily trainer in this batch — the Pegasus 41 at 285 g, the Vongo v6 at 290 g — and significantly heavier than lightweight options like the Hyperspeed 4 at 186 g.
The 22 mm heel stack is below the threshold for comfortable repeated road impact. Published work on stack height (Sinclair 2021, Journal of Sports Sciences) reports increased impact transmission at lower stacks across long efforts. For a daily training shoe, the 22 mm heel is in the marginal category.
The 7 mm drop is moderate, which would be fine in a running-specific design. Combined with the low stack and the lateral-stability foam tuning, the Nano X4's running feel is firm and unforgiving. It is the wrong tool for road kilometres.
So what is it for, exactly?
The Nano X4 is the right tool for Hyrox racing, functional fitness training (Crossfit-style), strength sessions with running intervals, gym work that includes some treadmill running, and lifting where you want a stable platform without committing to a dedicated lifting shoe. For these purposes, the firmness, weight, and stack profile become advantages rather than compromises. The Floatride Energy + EVA foam stack supports sled pushes and lateral movement. The lower stack provides ground feel during lifts.
The price problem and the alternatives
At ₹13,999, the Nano X4 is mid-priced for the Hyrox and functional fitness category. Other defensible options in India include the Nike Metcon series, the Adidas Dropset, and the NoBull Trainer. Each has different design priorities. Compare specifications across the running shoe library through our running shoe library and the rest of the Reebok lineup on the Reebok hub.
For a runner who is mostly running and occasionally lifting, a pair of dedicated running shoes plus a separate lifting shoe is the more honest spend. The dedicated tools are better at their dedicated purposes than any single hybrid. At ₹13,999, the Nano X4 is good value for a Hyrox specialist but is rarely the right answer for a runner who lifts twice a week.
Compare with what else ₹14,000 buys
For ₹13,999, a runner could buy the New Balance FuelCell Rebel v5 at ₹13,495 (lightweight daily, PEBA blend), the Saucony Kinvara 15 at ₹12,499 (lightweight daily, PWRRUN), or the Brooks Hyperion Max 2 at ₹14,999 (super-trainer with nylon plate). Each is a better running shoe than the Nano X4 by every running-relevant metric. For race-day comparison with serious running shoes, see our super-shoe comparison.
The Nano X4 wins only one running-relevant comparison: it is a more durable platform for runners who treat their training shoe roughly. If you are a runner who also does heavy gym work in the same shoes, the Nano X4 holds up better than any running-specific shoe.
When the Nano X4 is the right answer
Yes if: you race Hyrox or do regular functional fitness; you want one shoe that handles both treadmill running and lifting; you train in a hybrid format that includes lateral movement; you want a durable training shoe that absorbs gym abuse.
No if: your training is primarily road running; you race road events from 5K to marathon; you have separate gym and running shoes already; you are a beginner runner who needs cushioned support.
Maybe if: you are transitioning from gym-only to running plus gym. In that case, the Nano X4 is a stopgap that handles both modestly. Within 6 months, a dedicated running shoe pays for itself in comfort and injury prevention.
The honest verdict
The Reebok Nano X4 is a competent Hyrox and functional-fitness shoe. It is the wrong shoe for a runner who is mostly running. The marketing blurs this line because the categories overlap on retail shelves, but the engineering does not. Match the shoe to the actual use case. For Hyrox racers and Crossfit athletes, the Nano X4 is a defensible ₹13,999 spend. For runners, redirect that money to a dedicated running shoe.
To plan a training block that matches your shoe choice to your goal — whether Hyrox, marathon, or hybrid — the STRIDD plan generator outputs goal-specific weekly structures. Compare options through our shoe comparison tool before committing.