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Tiny Race Series – April 11 Routes – Makuri Tour

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Tiny Race Series – April 11 Routes – Makuri Tour

See zwiftinsider.com/tiny for current Tiny Race details.


All About the New Pinarello Dogma GR Gravel Frame on Zwift

All About the New Pinarello Dogma GR Gravel Frame on Zwift

Zwift’s latest update includes a new gravel frame from Pinarello, the Italian company’s first gravel frame in game. It’s the Pinarello Dogma GR, which is Pinarello’s race-focused gravel bike, sort of a “road bike in disguise” made for shorter, faster, less chunky gravel excursions:

On Zwift, you’ll need to be updated to game version 1.111+ to see this bike in the Drop Shop. You’ll also need to be at level 30+ with 1,100,000 Drops to buy it. Here’s how it’s described in the Drop Shop:

“End of Excuses. The Dogma GR carries that unmistakable Pinarello silhouette into gravel with lightweight carbon and race-tuned stiffness. It responds instantly when you surge and feels laser-precise at pace. Bold lines. Serious intent.”

See our master list of all frames in Zwift >

It’s rated 2 stars for aero 3 stars for weight, so we know it will perform decently well compared to other Zwift gravel bikes. But since Zwift’s 4-star system isn’t the most granular of performance measurements, we ran this frame through our precise tests to measure performance at nerd-level detail. Let’s dive in!

Note: test results below are from a 75kg, 183cm rider holding 300W steady using Zwift’s stock gravel wheelset on the un-upgraded version of the frame.

Aero (Flat/Rolling) Performance

Pinarello’s Dogma GR turns in a strong performance on the flats, beating all existing gravel bikes on tarmac apart from the new Cannondale SuperX LAB71 and Cervelo Aspero 5.

For comparison, the stock Zwift Gravel frame loses 145.4 seconds to our baseline Zwift Carbon frame across an hour of flat tarmac, while the (former) fastest gravel bike, the Cervelo Aspero 5, loses 111.2 seconds. The Dogma GR loses 112.8 seconds.

Climb Performance

The Dogma GR is a strong climber as well, essentially tying the Specialized Crux while falling just short of the new Cannondale SuperX LAB71.

The stock Zwift Gravel frame loses 161.8 seconds to our baseline Zwift Carbon frame across an hour of Alpe du Zwift climbing, while the new Cannondale SuperX LAB71 loses 118.7 seconds. The Dogma GR loses 122.1 seconds, putting it in 3rd (or tied for 2nd with the Crux at 122 seconds) among the gravel frames in our climbing test.

Jungle Performance

Of course, nobody really cares about how well a gravel frame performs on pavement, which is where we do our aero and climb testing (above). While those flat and climb tests help us tease out a frame’s aerodynamic capabilities and weight, when it comes to gravel bikes, people really want to know how fast they are on Zwift’s virtual dirt!

In that regard, the Pinarello Dogma GR turns in a strong performance, just 0.2 seconds behind the new Cannondale SuperX Lab71 and 0.8 seconds behind the Cervelo Aspero 5 across an hour of Jungle Circuit riding.

Upgrading Your Pinarello Dogma GR

Like all frames in Zwift, Pinarello’s Dogma GR can be upgraded in five stages. As a high-end race bike, each of the five stages results in a performance improvement. The Dogma GR upgrade stages are as follows:

  1. Ride 200km, pay 100,000 Drops for an aero upgrade
  2. Ride 260km, pay 200,000 Drops for a weight reduction
  3. Ride 320km, pay 350,000 Drops for a drivetrain efficiency improvement
  4. Ride 380km, pay 500,000 Drops for an aero upgrade
  5. Ride 440km, pay 750,000 Drops for a weight reduction

You can expect a fully-upgraded Pinarello Dogma GR to be approximately 28 seconds faster on a flat hour and 36 seconds faster on an hour-long climb vs a “stock” (un-upgraded) Dogma GR.

Conclusions

As both a strong climber and aero performer, Pinarello’s new Dogma GR beats every gravel bike in Zwift apart from the new Cannondale SuperX Lab71 and Cervelo Aspero 5. And it holds its own quite nicely against those two frames anyway, so if you’re a Pinarello fan, riding this as your virtual gravel whip may just be the winning move.

We’ll be adding this bike to the following posts soon:

Questions or comments?

What do you think of Pinarello’s new Dogma GR in Zwift? Share below…

Important note: this post contains speed test results for Zwift frames or wheels. These results may change over time, and a bike's performance relative to others may also change. We don't always revise posts when performance rankings change, but we do keep current, master versions of our speed test results which are always available. See the frame charts, wheel charts, and Tron vs Top Performers for current performance data.


All About the New Roval Terra Aero CLX Gravel Wheels in Zwift

All About the New Roval Terra Aero CLX Gravel Wheels in Zwift

This week’s game update includes a fresh set of gravel wheels from Roval: the Terra Aero CLX. While these wheels have been tested covertly by pros for several months, it’s only in the last couple of weeks that we’ve seen them announced publicly.

These wheels are interesting IRL for a few reasons, including their unique “Chopped Aero Speed” design and the front wheel being slightly deeper (50mm) than the rear (45mm). These are the aero gravel wheels in Roval’s lineup, while the Terra CLX III is their lightweight gravel offering.

Here’s how these wheels are described in the Drop Shop: “The fastest gravel race wheels are flat – you read that correctly. Flat. Our novel truncated airfoil may look odd & flat but with up to 5.84 watts faster than Terra CLX II, with aero gains that matter from mile one to mile two hundred.”

The wheels are now available in the Drop Shop, accessible at level 38 and above, for 650,000 Drops. Notably, they are rated 3 stars for aero and 3 for weight, the only gravel wheelset in game with such a high rating apart from the new Zipp 303. This should indicate that they’ll perform well compared to other gravel wheels in Zwift, but since Zwift’s 4-star rating system isn’t precise enough for our taste, we ran these wheels through our standard battery of tests to determine exactly how they perform in Zwift and stack up against other gravel wheelsets.

Let’s dive in and learn all about the in-game performance of the newest gravel wheelset from Roval!

Aero (Flat/Rolling) Performance

Roval’s Terra Aero CLX is neck-and-neck even with the new Zipp 303 XPLR SW, turning in a one-hour flat test time 1/10th of a second faster in our tests.

That means these two wheelsets are both the fastest on Zwift dirt, outpacing all other gravel wheels by approximately 13 seconds across an hour of riding.

Climb Performance

The Terra Aero CLX edges out the new Zipp wheels in our climb test, which aligns with the fact that these hoops from Roval are slightly lighter than Zipp’s IRL.

Roval’s Terra Aero CLX beats the Zipp 303 XPLR SW by 3.8 seconds across an hour of climbing, and beats the older gravel wheels by an additional 1-2 seconds on top of that.

Note: all test results above are from a 75kg, 183cm rider holding 300W steady using the Zwift Gravel frame.

Jungle (Dirt) Performance

The aero performance and slight climbing advantage shown in our pavement tests translate into improved performance for the Roval Terra Aero CLX in our Jungle Circuit test. These wheels edge out the Zipp 303 XPLR SW by just 0.6 across an hour of dirt riding, while edging out all the older gravel wheels by 15+ seconds.

Conclusions

The Roval Terra Aero CLX is Zwift’s new top gravel wheelset, so if you’re racing in the dirt, you’ll want to pick up a set.

That said, I do want to lodge one complaint: it looks like Zwift’s art team created these wheels by just copying the Roval Terra CLX already in game, and giving them a different wordmark and spoke count on the front wheel. The problem is, these new wheels have a deeper rim depth, and that unique “chopped aero” design. Neither of these distinctives show in game, which makes these wheels look pretty boring.

But at least they’re fast.

My guess is the artwork will be updated in a future release.

These wheels have been, or will soon be, added to the following posts:

Questions or comments?

Share below!

Important note: this post contains speed test results for Zwift frames or wheels. These results may change over time, and a bike's performance relative to others may also change. We don't always revise posts when performance rankings change, but we do keep current, master versions of our speed test results which are always available. See the frame charts, wheel charts, and Tron vs Top Performers for current performance data.


Zwift Changes Gravel Race Routes One Day Into Series Due to Bugs

Zwift Changes Gravel Race Routes One Day Into Series Due to Bugs

Yesterday, Zwift made the unprecedented decision to pull Gravel Mountain’s new Red Rock Loop as the week’s featured Pas Racing series route, swapping it out for Watopia’s Jungle Circuit.

They’ve also changed the plan for stage 4 of the series, swapping out Red Rock Loop Reverse for Watopia’s Serpentine 8.

It’s a surprising move from Zwift, who have been teasing this week’s Gravel Mountain launch for weeks. But was it the right move?

The Bugs

On Monday morning, April 6, I walked upstairs to my office and fired up the ol’ YouTubes so I could watch the very first Gravel Mountain races and see what riders thought. I was excited about the launch – I had already seen the new route, having “pre-ridden” it using my bot on a pre-release build of the game so I could create a Strava segment for the new route.

Here’s my bot riding the course at 4 w/kg:

Watching the bot on the route, I had a few thoughts:

  • The map is gorgeous. The rocks and scenery are epic and beautiful.
  • The road is still too wide – and this is something I said about Gravel Mountain years ago. One of the cool things about gravel riding is that feel of going fast on narrow roads. Portions of Gravel Mountain feel much too wide, and this makes the road feel more boring and less speedy.
  • It felt fast, because Zwift was pulling some sort of trickery to make the course move past more quickly than normal, while keeping your actual speed realistic. It didn’t feel overly fast to me – but I also wasn’t experiencing the increased speed of racing in a pack.

Overall, my takeaway after bot-riding the route was that racers would enjoy the experience, and that it might bring something new to the world of Zwift – the fast-paced gravel crit.

So I was genuinely surprised at what I saw in the livestreams of the first gravel races. Here are the two streams I was watching, from Bike Bonk Biff and Road to A:

The first comments of these two streamers are pretty telling:

“Woah! That was a fast start! What? What was that? What the hell is this? That’s surely a bug, right? Or…?” (~Road to A)

“Oh! OK. This is actually… why is it so fast? What? What is happening right now?” (~Bike Bonk Biff)

Watch the streams, and you’ll quickly see what I saw:

  • Too fast: Speeds were much higher in the pack than on my solo ride (for example, Road to A’s speed was 10 kph higher at the end of the initial s-curves than my bot).
  • The bouncing: While the rider’s own avatar didn’t seem to bounce on screen, other riders’ avatars intermittently were, and the effect was not good. Not good at all.
  • Erratic movements: Riders were shifting back and forth left to right too quickly, and sometimes flying up through the middle of the pack unrealistically fast.
  • Riding through rocks: riders were moving through rocks and bushes on the edge of the road in places.
  • No rider placings: The game stopped showing what place the rider was in (on the right-hand rider list) near the start of the first lap.
  • Negative feedback: Feedback via in-game messaging was instantly negative. I’m sure Zwift has all those messages stored on a server somewhere, and if they were to make a wordcloud out of them all, the biggest phrase would probably be “wtf”.

Zwift’s forum quickly lit up, with one rider starting a topic that has received over 100 replies in 48 hours.

To top it all off, riders reported not getting credit for finishing the stage, including the promised 1000 XP bonus.

Zwift Pulls the Plug

Just after 9am my time on Tuesday, April 7, 24 hours after the first Red Rock Loop events were held, Zwift’s event guru James Bailey posted this on the forum topic linked above:

Based on early feedback to the faster experience on Gravel Mountain, we’ve decided to make route changes for Stages 1 and 4. There will be a more detailed update coming shortly.

A few hours later, Zwift’s VP of Product Mark Cote wrote this:

Hey Zwifters,

As James mentioned, we’ve changed out the routes for PAS stages from Gravel Mtn as we address the issues some experienced. Crediting for Stage 1 completion is being handled as well and all should see credit for completion by EOD today.

W/r to Gravel Mountain: The ‘issues’ were especially notable for high powered, non-steering paired users on specific refresh rate devices…ultimately this led to a few people having a very bad experience with camera swaying and some on-screen jitters. The rest of us had the desired (sped up gravel) experience we were shooting for. We did test this on several occasions internally but missed testing in the high-speed, large packs that were apparent during the first events. Yep, obvious in hindsight, but here we are and we’ve adjusted the events.

Gravel Mtn WILL be back soon and tuned via additional testing. There’s something to the feeling of speed that we’re all quite excited about and we will dial this in. We definitely want to be trying new, fun things out but we missed the mark on the quality that we strive to deliver.

Thanks as always for the commentary and reporting here. It’s super appreciated and valued by our team.

Mark Cote

What About the GC?

At the time of this post, Zwift hasn’t determined how to handle the time-based GC for the Pas Normal Racing series. It wouldn’t make sense to mix finishing times for two different courses, but it’s also not ideal to force riders to race again on the Jungle Circuit the same week when they already raced Red Rock Loop.

My take: Zwift should just not count stage 1 in the overall GC of the series. That seems like it would be easy to implement on their end, and racers would understand having the stage neutralized due to a mid-week course swap.

I’ll update this post once Zwift determines how they’re handling the GC.

My Thoughts

First, I do think Zwift made the right call in pulling the plug on Red Rock Loop this week. The race experience was just too buggy.

It all seems so avoidable, though, right? Why wasn’t this caught in early tests?

Hindsight is 20/20, of course. But surely this could have all been avoided by Zwift testing the race course with a large enough pack of riders at realistic race pace. I’m sure Zwift’s QA department is taking notes in this regard.

I think most racers will agree when I say that I do hope they quickly fix the bugs, and launch a much-improved Gravel Mountain soon. I like the idea of a fast-paced gravel crit course, and I think Zwift can make it happen. I do, however, share the thoughts/concerns of Aoi Niigaki, who posted this on Zwift’s forum:

If Zwift is after a sped up experience then that can be achieved through good course design. One of the things I noticed with the Gravel Mountain stage is how incredibly wide the road was. Narrower roads, tighter corners, shorter straights would all improve the perception of speed without the need to artificially boost it.

It’s a dangerous road you are going down Zwift (which started with the accelerated subway exits in New York). If people get used to double speed races then riding at normal speeds will start to seem slow and boring. Power creep is a thing in games and needs to be carefully managed less you stuff it up completely.

Aoi_Niigaki

I’m not convinced Zwift needs to speed up the visuals in order for gravel racing to be fun. And I definitely know that narrow roads with more turns/shorter straights can make a course feel fast and engaging without leading to “power creep”. I’d like to see Zwift explore this, particularly for virtual gravel and MTB racing.

That said, I’m not completely against Zwift’s idea of artificially boosting the perceived speed (let’s call it “visual speed”) of a route for a particular gamified race mode. This kind of experimentation is important, and I like that Zwift is willing to give it a try. It definitely needs to be dialed back though, particularly in the faster race categories.

Your Thoughts

Did you race Red Rock Loop? How did it go? And do you think Zwift made the right call in pulling it? Share your thoughts below…


Zwift Racing League Week 2 Guide: The Classic (Points Race)

The second race of Zwift Racing League 2025/26 Round 4 happens Tuesday, April 14, and we’re in Watopia for an attritional multi-lap points race on The Classic, a replica of the first Zwift route ever created.

Don’t understand how ZRL points races work? Read our explainer >

There’s much to discuss, including crucial course segments, powerup usage, bike decisions, and strategic options. Let’s go!

Looking at the Route

Each lap of The Classic is 4.7 km (2.9 miles) long, and there’s also a 4.1 km (2.5 miles) lead-in to the first lap. A/B teams will race 6 laps (33.2km, 306 m), while C/D will race 4 23.5 km, 210m).

The route is a simple counterclockwise loop of Watopia’s Jarvis Island. The circuit includes a short sprint plus a draggy KOM which will prove decisive:

The race will begin with a ~4 km lead-in from Watopia’s downtown start pens, taking riders around the upper half of the Volcano Circuit and onto the Jarvis loop.

I wouldn’t expect any big moves here, as riders will be keeping their powder dry for the points segments up the road.

A note about powerups: as explained below, WTRL tells me riders will receive Aero Boosts at the Jarvis KOM arch, Feathers at the Jarvis Sprint arch, and Draft Boosts at any other arches. That means you’ll receive a draft boost at the downtown Watopia lap banner just after starting, and at the Jarvis lap banner each lap. These leads to some interesting strategic choices, which I discuss more below in the Powerups section.

The first points segment we’ll encounter is the Jarvis KOM. This climb is 1.8 km long, averaging 1.8%, but keep in mind that average gradient number is affected by a bit of downhill that begins 1 km into the climb:

It’s better to think of this KOM as two short climbs (the first 1 km long at 2.7% and the second 400 meters long at 2.5%) separated by 500 meters of descent/flat. This is a very draftable climb, especially at race speeds, so take advantage of the draft (and maybe your Draft Boost powerup) to conserve effort.

A quick 1.2 km descent from the KOM’s crest brings will bring us to the start of the circuit’s sprint segment, the Jarvis Sprint:

This is a flat (-0.1%), 200-meter sprint, and we’ll be hitting it with a big head of steam. This one will be fast and short, so consider yourself warned: you’ll probably need to start the sprint positioned near the front of the pack if you want to finish near the front.

The Jarvis lap arch comes less than 900 meters after the Jarvis Sprint arch, and you’ll get a Draft Boost powerup here if you aren’t currently holding onto a powerup.

That’s one lap. A/B riders will complete 6 laps, C/D will complete 4.

One final note on the finish: since the Jarvis lap arch finish line is less than 900 meters after the final Jarvis Sprint arch, you can expect the effort to continue after the final sprint segment. It’s going to be a fast, hard finish!

Read more about The Classic >

Powerups

WTRL tells me riders will receive Aero Boosts at the Jarvis KOM arch, Feathers at the Jarvis Sprint arch, and Draft Boosts at all other arches. That means you’ll receive a draft boost at the downtown Watopia lap banner within seconds of beginning the race. After that, you’ll receive these powerups on each Jarvis lap:

  • Draft Boost at the lap arch
  • Aero Boost at the Jarvis KOM arch
  • Feather at the Jarvis Sprint arch

Draft Boost (van): increases the draft effect you are experiencing for 40 seconds.
Use at higher speeds (flats and descents) when you are already drafting off another rider (since this powerup only helps when you are drafting.) This could be employed on the downhill/flat bit of the KOM, or any other fast part of the course.

A simple white helmet with a visor, shown in profile with three lines behind it to indicate speed, centered on a turquoise circle with a gray and white border.

Aero Boost (helmet): makes you more aerodynamic (reduces your CdA by 25%) for 15 seconds.
Use at higher speeds (flats and descents). Everyone will be using this on the Jarvis Sprint points segment, so you probably don’t stand a chance of a good result without it! Trigger it a few seconds before the sprint begins, as it will probably take you less than 15 seconds to cover the actual sprint segment.

Lightweight (feather): reduces your weight by 10% for 30 seconds.
Use on climbs, when weight matters the most. The feather is best used on the Jarvis KOM – particularly the second stage of the climb, when riders will be on the limit.

Riders will need to decide if they use the feather just after receiving it at the sprint arch (in order to get the Draft Boost powerup at the lap arch), or hold onto it for the climb. Since using the feather just after the sprint is almost the same as throwing it away, the question boils down to: would you rather have the Draft Boost on the KOM, or the feather?

Bike Recommendations

You’ll want an all-arounder setup for this race, as the points are effectively “gated” by your performance on the Jarvis KOM. So pick your preferred all-arounder frame from the four top performers:

For wheels, I’d recommend two different top performers. Choose your advantage:

  • DT Swiss ARC 1100 DICUT 65: these are the more aero wheels, beating the Wake 6560 by 3.9 seconds across an hour of flat riding. These are optimized for the Jarvis Sprint.
  • Princeton Carbonworks Wake 6560: these are the better climbers, beating the DICUT 65 by 9.6 seconds across an hour of climbing. These are optimized for the Jarvis KOM.

Of course, your frame’s upgrade status should impact your decision. Read All About Zwift’s New “Bike Upgrades” Functionality for more. See also Speed Tests: Tron Bike vs Top Performers for more nerd-level detail on frame and wheel performance.

More Route Recons

Lots of recon events are scheduled on upcoming ZRL routes, led by various teams. See upcoming ZRL recons for this race at zwift.com/events/tag/zrlrecon.

Additionally, riders in the Zwift community do a great job every week creating recon videos that preview the courses and offer tips to help you perform your best on the day. Here are the recons I’ve found (comment if you find another!)

J Dirom

Strategic Options

Points Distributions, The Classic

6 Laps

4 Laps

These charts show the maximum points a team of 6 could earn in a race with 60 participants. To learn how ZRL points races work, see this post.

How will these races unfold? What strategies will teams employ? Here’s what I predict:

  • Honey, I Shrunk the Peloton: Some teams will choose to attack the KOM again and again, and this will cause the elastic to stretch and eventually snap for some riders.
  • First Lap FTS: Fastest Through Segment top 5 times will probably all be set on the first lap. Why? Because the pack draft will be largest then, and everyone will push hard on the initial lap’s segments. Riders will simply be too tired to better their times on subsequent laps from a smaller group.
  • Save the Sprinters: Teams with strong sprinters may try to keep the KOM as slow as possible to increase their sprinters’ chance of surviving the climb and grabbing points on the sprint.
  • A Long, Hard Finish: The final KOM will feature big attacks by riders with punchy w/kg. Then you may get a moment to rest on the short descent that follows… but that final flat ~1km through the sprint segment to the finish line is going to be mayhem.

Your Thoughts

Any insights or further thoughts on this race? Share below!

All About the New Cervelo Aspero 5 Gravel Frame on Zwift

All About the New Cervelo Aspero 5 Gravel Frame on Zwift

Zwift’s latest update includes a new gravel frame from Cervelo, the Aspero 5. Released last summer IRL, this is an unapologetically aero gravel bike which Cervelo claims is “37 Watts faster than its predecessor, and 34 Watts faster than the nearest competitor.”

On Zwift, you’ll need to be updated to game version 1.111+ to see this bike in the Drop Shop. You’ll also need to be at level 35+ with 1,250,000 Drops to buy it (the most expensive gravel bike on Zwift). Here’s how it’s described in the Drop Shop:

“Faster than the rest. The Aspero-5 blends aero shaping with razor-clean handling, making high-tempo gravel feel smooth and controlled. It accelerates with intent and tracks like it’s on rails, the kind of bike that dares you to push a bigger gear.”

See our master list of all frames in Zwift >

It’s rated 3 stars for aero and 3 stars for weight – the only gravel bike on Zwift with such a high aero rating! We expected it to perform well at high speeds, but since Zwift’s 4-star system isn’t the most granular of performance measurements, we ran this frame through our precise tests to measure performance at nerd-level detail. Let’s dive in!

Note: test results below are from a 75kg, 183cm rider holding 300W steady using Zwift’s stock gravel wheelset on the un-upgraded version of the frame.

Aero (Flat/Rolling) Performance

The Cervelo Aspero 5 certainly lives up to its billing as “the most aerodynamic gravel bike ever created.” It beats every other gravel bike in Zwift (including the other 4 fast frames added in March/April 2026), edging out the previous leader, the Cannondale SuperX LAB71, by 1.2 seconds across an hour of flat riding.

It also beats the old Cervelo Aspero, which used to be the fastest gravel bike on Zwift, by 4 seconds.

For comparison, the stock Zwift Gravel frame loses 145.4 seconds to our baseline Zwift Carbon frame across an hour of flat tarmac, while the (former) fastest gravel bike, the Cannondale SuperX LAB71, loses 112.4 seconds. The Aspero 5 only loses 111.2 seconds.

Climb Performance

Right now, Cervelo’s Aspero 5 isn’t a very strong climber on Zwift. But be sure to read about the * below for more info on how these results will be changing!

Currently, the Aspero 5 turns in essentially the same climb test time as the old Aspero. That means it loses 20.7 seconds across an hour of riding to the top climber, Cannondale’s SuperX LAB71.

The stock Zwift Gravel frame loses 161.8 seconds to our baseline Zwift Carbon frame across an hour of Alpe du Zwift climbing, while the new Aspero 5 loses 139.4 seconds, and the Cannondale SuperX LAB71 loses 118.7 seconds.

Jungle Performance

Of course, nobody really cares about how well a gravel frame performs on pavement, which is where we do our aero and climb testing (above). While those flat and climb tests help us tease out a frame’s aerodynamic capabilities and weight, when it comes to gravel bikes, people really want to know how fast they are on Zwift’s virtual dirt!

In that regard, the Cervelo Aspero 5 turns in the strongest performance of any gravel frame on Zwift, edging out the closest competition by around half a second* across an hour of Jungle Circuit riding.

About the * (Pending Weight Loss)

You’ll see we marked the test results above with an asterisk. Here’s why: Zwift tells us they will be reducing the weight of the Aspero 5 just a bit in the next release (version 1.112, scheduled for April 21).

So while the Aspero 5 is already a strong performer, it will be even faster after the next game update! The change won’t make the Aspero 5 the strongest climber in the Drop Shop, but will help it perform a bit better in the hills, while giving it a bigger edge in aero performance.

We’ll publish an updated version of this post once we’ve tested the updated frame.

Upgrading Your Cervelo Aspero 5

Like all frames in Zwift, Cervelo’s Aspero 5 can be upgraded in five stages. It’s currently set up as a mid-tier distance bike in terms of upgrade stages, but this is a misconfiguration on Zwift’s end which will be modified in the next game release, along with the bike’s weight. For now, though, the bike’s upgrade stages are as follows:

  1. Ride 160km, pay 50,000 Drops for an aero upgrade
  2. Ride 200km, pay 100,000 Drops for a weight reduction
  3. Ride 240km, pay 150,000 Drops for a drivetrain efficiency improvement
  4. Ride 280km, pay 200,000 Drops for an aero upgrade
  5. Ride 320km, pay 250,000 Drops for a 5% Drops boost

Any upgrade stages you reach and purchase will remain even after Zwift updates this bike’s upgrade scheme, so you’ve got two weeks to upgrade it as quickly as you can!

You can expect a fully-upgraded Aspero 5 to be approximately 28 seconds faster on a flat hour and 36 seconds faster on an hour-long climb vs a “stock” (un-upgraded) Aspero 5.

Conclusions

When it comes to fast dirt on Zwift (think flat roads or even the Jungle Circuit), Cervelo’s Aspero 5 beats every gravel bike in Zwift, just edging out the other fast frames added in March/April 2026. And while it’s not the best frame for pure climbing, it’s going to get a bit lighter in two weeks, making it the best choice for most gravel races, if you’re looking purely at performance.

My opinion: it’s fast, but it’s also a pity the bike doesn’t have a cooler colorway in Zwift. While Cervelo has never been known for particularly eye-catching paint jobs, something a bit more blingy would have been welcome. Maybe someday Zwift will let us buy a cool Aspero 5 paint job in the Drop Shop.

We’ll be adding this bike to the following posts soon:

Questions or comments?

What do you think of Cervelo’s new Aspero 5 in Zwift? Share below…

Important note: this post contains speed test results for Zwift frames or wheels. These results may change over time, and a bike's performance relative to others may also change. We don't always revise posts when performance rankings change, but we do keep current, master versions of our speed test results which are always available. See the frame charts, wheel charts, and Tron vs Top Performers for current performance data.


Zwift Update Version 1.111 (160391) Released

Zwift version 1.111 begins its phased rollout today. It includes new gravel bikes and wheels, and several event-only routes are now available for free riding. See details below…

New Gravel Frames+Wheels

Just in time for the Pas Racing Series that began yesterday, Zwift has released the rest of their promised gravel frames and wheels. We’ve got three new frames:

  • Specialized Diverge 4: level 12+, 400,000 Drops, 2 stars aero, 2 stars weight
  • Pinarello Dogma GR: level 30+, 1,100,100 Drops, 2 stars aero, 3 stars weight
  • Cervelo Aspero 5: level 35+, 1,250,000 Drops, 3 stars aero, 3 stars weight (the first 3-star aero gravel frame on Zwift!)

There’s a new gravel wheelset as well: the Roval Terra Aero CLX. These wheels are available at level 38+ for 650,000 Drops, and are rated 3 stars for aero and 3 stars for weight.

Watch this space for speed test results for each of these new items, as well as our first-ever Gravel Charts page comparing the speeds of all the gravel frames and wheels!

Newly Opened Routes

Six newish routes that were previously event-only are now available for free rides and meetups. If you haven’t earned these route badges yet, they’re easier to access now:

HRM Consent

Zwift says, “Zwifters who use heart rate monitors (HRMs) will be prompted to provide one-time consent to share heart rate data with Zwift the next time they connect the HRM device. The HRM will not auto-pair until consent has been given. If consent is not provided, the HRM device will not be paired. There is no change to how Zwift uses heart rate data. Consent can be withdrawn at any time in Settings > Permissions.”

Retired Bikes

While not announced in the release notes, this update removes the following old frames from the Drop Shop:

  • Canyon 2019 Grail
  • Pinarello 2015 Dogma 8
  • Pinarello 2020 Dogma F12
  • Cervelo Aspero

If you own any of these frames, they will remain in your garage. But you won’t be able to purchase these frames once you upgrade to Zwift version 1.111.

Release Notes

Zwift supplied the following additional release notes:

  • Android: Fixed an issue where title music was not playing on Android, turn up the volume before you turn up the watts!

Discuss this update in Zwift’s forum >

Questions or Comments?

If you spotted any other changes or bugs in the update, please comment below!

From 250 lb Gamer to Ultracyclist  – Matt Sant

From 250 lb Gamer to Ultracyclist  – Matt Sant

For decades, Matt Sant refined what he called his “read, research, execute” methodology through gaming. Once he chose a goal, he went into sponge mode, absorbing everything he could find – manuals, writeups, forum threads, videos, commentaries – until he understood his adversary completely. Then he’d execute with surgical precision until the job was done.

“My criteria for a worthwhile goal were simple: it had to be hard, with a high failure rate. It had to be obscure, with little external reward. Finally, it had to provoke that ‘Why on earth would someone do that?’ reaction when people heard about it.”

Eventually he realised this pattern wasn’t limited to gaming. The same approach worked for almost anything: A copper-pipe, water-cooled computer build; building an arcade machine; power-carving a wooden chaise lounge; smelting, forging, and knifemaking.

One day, when he was looking in the mirror, he didn’t like what he saw, and he realized he needed to do something. So, instead of applying his methodology to external objects, he decided to focus it on himself. It was time to make a real change.

So Long, Potato Chips

Matt’s approach to gaming was always the min/max powergamer approach, and so he took the same scalpel to his diet; he completely cut out the bad stuff, researched what was good, and focused on calories in/calories out. He began applying his methodology to his diet, obsessively tracking calories and uncovering some glaring issues that needed fixing. 

“I think the biggest issue was that I wasn’t paying attention or tracking what I ate at all. If I felt hungry, or bored, then I ate. The biggest being potato chips and full sugar soft drinks, both of which I’d frequently eat late into the night as my family slept and I stayed up gaming.” 

Jogging In the Dark

He added a few 6 am strength classes at the gym each week and soon started walking the 2 km there and back. “It feels almost unbelievable now that in early 2024 walking alone left me sore the next day.”

Those 6 am classes meant walking to the gym at 5:30 am in the dark, when nobody was watching. That gave him the courage to try jogging. At first, he could barely manage 100 meters before his lungs burned, and he had to stop. “But I kept at it. I still remember proudly telling my wife one morning, “I ran the whole way WITHOUT stopping!””

He took his newly discovered ability to run 2 km WITHOUT stopping and… well… ran with it. “Over the next few months, I built up to my first 5km, then my first 10km.”

Fractured, but Not Fallen

By June 2024, he was eyeing a half-marathon. “One Sunday I went out and ran 22km.”

Elated, he kept running through the week and repeated the half-marathon every Sunday for the next month. 

“I was all in, loving it, until a stress fracture in my right leg brought everything to a sudden, world-shattering halt.”

“It was a classic “zero to hero” injury.” It started as some pain in his right ankle.  He remembers on a weekly 5 km jog around the neighbourhood having to stop and limp home. Matt would rest for a few days and think it’d be okay, only for it to hurt when he started running. “Annoyingly, I went to several physio appointments, they checked a number of things and gave me exercises, but nothing seemed to make a difference.”

Finally out of frustration he went to the doctor and asked for an x-ray, “Just to make sure that nothing mechanically looks wrong.” That’s when he got the result back – that he’d been trying to run on a stress fracture. 

Discovering Zwift and a Passion for Endurance

The stress fracture was incredibly frustrating and depressing. Just as Matt connected with this ability to push himself, getting fitter and knocking over increasingly longer distances, it was gone.

Luckily, Matt met coworker Myles Bagley, who became a mentor who spoke his language – data. He didn’t just give Matt “hope” in a vague sense; Myles gave him a system. He introduced Matt to Zwift, which allowed him to gamify his fitness. “It changed my life.”

He was tentative at first – he hadn’t owned a bike since he was a kid and didn’t know the first thing about cycling. “I needed something to fill the gap though, so took the plunge and bought both a bike and a virtual trainer.”

At first, even 30-minute rides exhausted him. “I remember something Myles said that stuck with me: consistency matters. I pushed myself and kept at it every day, and consistency did what consistency does. I found that as months progressed, I was able to push out the ride duration and frequency – hitting a 120-day cycling streak going into 2025.”

Building Toward Something: Riding 500k in a Single Day

A friend told him about a challenge event called the Rapha Festive 500 that happens during the last week of the year. The goal? Ride a total of 500 km over that period.

He did some quick calculations and realized that he would have to ride 60-70 km per day, which he felt was way beyond his ability. “Instead, I set myself the goal of doing my first 100km ride – it was tough and I was sore afterward, but I managed to do it.”

In the weeks after that, as he maintained the consistency, he started to formulate an ambitious training goal: “At the end of 2025 I would not only participate in the Rapha Festive 500, but I would do the 500km in a single ride.”

Come December 2025, Matt did indeed achieve his goal, riding 500 km in a single day. Given where he had come from, this was an incredible achievement for him in so many ways.

(You can read Matt’s journal of the ride at the end of this article. It really is quite amazing!)

Reflection: “It’s all in your head.”

“Reflecting back, a persistent companion on this journey has been this ‘spectre of doubt.’ I was always pushing myself to prove “them” wrong, in my head it was all the people out there that didn’t believe in me. That didn’t believe I could do it.”

Matt remembers his wife one day telling him, “You do know they’re not out there, right? That they’re all in your head?”

“That was a sobering moment! I guess in retrospect I did always know that. I think where I once needed the feeling of proving ‘those people’ wrong to motivate me, to keep me going, I’ve since found the discipline to keep pushing regardless.”

Ride on, Matt! And on, and on, and on, and on!

You can follow Matt on Zwift at: Matthew Sant
Follow Matt on Strava >


Matt’s Rapha 500km Journal

3:15AM – My alarm sounds and I jump out of bed. It’s 3:15AM on the 26th December, 2025 – Boxing Day. The air feels special – as if the festive period has cast a spell and the world now slumbers deeply; it feels extra quiet, still. I’m not up by chance – I’ve spent 600 hours this year training for today, and now it’s finally here. I’m about to spend the next 16 hours riding over 500km on a bike in my garage.

6:00AM – 60KM – By 4am I was away, and the first few hours have been a mental struggle. I can’t stop my brain from reminding me “Hey you know you’re going to be here a LONG LONG time right?”. Thanks brain, yeah I actually do know.

The hundreds of hours training I’ve put into the last year remind me that this is always what my head does, regardless of it being a 2-hour ride or a 12-hour ride. I push on.

8:00AM – 120KM – The mental noise quietens as it always does and I start to feel settled in, enjoying the grind. I’m in a pacer group riding at 1.8w/kg (31km/h, 120w) which is a comfortable ‘all day’ pace. I’m starting to see the familiar names of friends in the ‘virtual pack’ which helps. I’m allowing myself only one 3-minute break per hour to hop off, stretch my legs, and refill my water. Things are working well.

Suzie and the girls are awake and have come down to say hello and chat which is a great mood booster. They bring me a coffee and a banana smoothie which is a great change to the gels and carb/water drink.

10:00AM – 180KM – I’d originally planned to do this ride on the 28th December, but brought it forward because the 26th was going to be a much nicer temperature (20°C versus 28°C). Right now the temperature in the garage is 16°C and with a powerful fan on I’m feeling cold, if anything. A good problem to have!

Mentally I’m in an ideal flow state – present but not present –just existing, feeling, but losing myself and losing time which is what you want on a day like today. I’ve planned for an actual lunch break since this ride will be so long, something I don’t usually do.

I want to hit 250KM before lunch. The biggest psychological challenges will come later in the day, and breaking the back of the ride will be a meaningful mental milestone.

12:10PM – 260KM – Lunch! I stop for the first and only proper break I’ll have on the ride today. I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about how to optimize the break today. I’ve moved a hammock from the upstairs balcony to the garage next to the bike, right in collapsing distance!

I have a quick shower which feels great, and change into fresh riding gear which also feels amazing. I get stuck into some solid fast food – a double quarter pounder meal, 2 Large Fries, 10 Nuggets, and an Iced Matcha. I get it all down and chill out in the hammock.

After an hour’s break I’m underway again. The break and the shower have been the only real change in usual routine so I’m a little anxious about how my body is going to cope with the extended break. So far so good.

3:10PM – 320KM – Some time around here I hit the peak mental challenge of the day. I’m somewhere in the 300’s kilometre-wise and just not feeling it. I consider what it might mean to not hit my goal, how I might feel, if one day I’d come back and try it again.

I always knew this would be a long shot and that at some point I might face this moment.

What to do? Suddenly, miraculously, some kind of switch flips in my head; a bolt of lightning, a eureka moment. A surge of adrenaline comes from somewhere deep down and suddenly I’m grinning from ear to ear. I have no idea what just happened, but I’m now absolutely certain that nothing is going to stop me achieving my goal today.

6:10PM – 410KM – I’ve sailed past my previous longest distance of 366km and am feeling amazing. There’s so much positivity and good vibes coming from the people I’m virtually riding with, strangers are keeping track of how far I am and calling out different milestones as I hit them with notes of encouragement.

8:50PM – 500KM – Mission Accomplished! Suzie and the girls are by my side for the final couple of kilometres and cheer me on. I’m overwhelmed and incredibly happy to have achieved one of the most ambitious goals of my life.

Compared to some of the 300km training rides I did throughout the year this is night and day, I feel like I could keep going. As I’ve been celebrating and cooling down, continuing to pedal, I’ve clicked over to 501km. Suzie informs me “Well now it’s an odd number, you can’t stop on an odd number!” I grin, and sprint one more kilometer, ending the day at 502km after 15 hours and 50 minutes of riding.


Top 5 Zwift Videos: Zwift Community Live, Budget Smart Bikes, and PAS Racing

What do four days of epic rides at Zwift Community Live in Mallorca look like? In this week’s top video, tag along with one Zwifter as she conquers the roads of Mallorca during ZCL 2026.

Along with ZCL, this week includes videos about the Cycplus T7, the PAS Racing Series, and Zwift Games racing.

Get the inside scoop from Moloko Cycling as she takes viewers through her time at Zwift Community Live.

Peak Torque shares a long-term review of the Cycplus T7. Has this budget-friendly smart bike stood the test of time?

Zwift is set to launch its latest “Gravel Mountain” world with the upcoming PAS Racing Series. Learn all about this race series from Bike Bonk Biff.

Watch as Harstem battles his way through Stage 4 of the Zwift Games. Can he make it onto the podium?

Thomas Martinez, aka The Cycling Tattooist, shares his experience riding with some professional cyclists at Zwift Community Live 2026 in Mallorca.

Got a Great Zwift Video?

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