Reign
Origin
Giant introduced the Reign in 2005 as one of the first bikes to carry their newly developed Maestro four-pivot rear suspension, and it has shaped Giant's long-travel trail and enduro line ever since. At launch the Reign offered some of the most aggressive geometry and longest travel available from a major brand, well before enduro existed as a discipline; by 2013 Giant produced the first carbon Reign using their Advanced Composite Technology, and 2015 brought 27.5-inch wheels and an even more aggressive geometry update. The current generation runs 160 mm of Maestro rear travel paired with a 170 mm fork on the standard Reign, while the Reign SX pushes to 165 mm rear with a dual-crown 190 mm fork for park use. All current Reigns get a three-position flip chip that adjusts BB drop, head angle (63.5° / 63.9° / 64.2°) and seat angle, and the wheel size is mullet-capable — 29-inch front, with the option to drop a 27.5-inch wheel in the rear. The Reign SX is mullet-only. Frames are ALUXX SL aluminium on the standard models and Advanced composite on the carbon versions, with European pricing typically ranging from around €3,000 for the alloy Reign 2 to €5,500+ for top builds.
Specifications
- Frame
- Advanced-grade composite (carbon) or ALUXX SL 6011 aluminium; 160 mm Maestro suspension, Maestro 3 flip-chip, 12×148 mm, mullet-capable, down-tube storage
- Weight
- kg
- Drivetrain
- 1×12; Shimano XT M8100 or SRAM GX Eagle by trim
- Brakes
- 4-piston hydraulic disc; Shimano SLX/XT 220/203 mm rotors
- Wheels
- Mullet 29" front / 27.5" rear (or full 27.5"); Giant TRX carbon (Advanced) or alloy
The verdict
- Flow MTB: 'Tyre choice superb — DD casing rear, EXO+ front — perfect enduro match'
- Flow MTB review (2023): 'all-black aesthetic somewhat boring'
Who it’s for
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