Supernova Rise 3
Today's tracked prices
- 01ASOS10d ago£71.50£130.00−45%
- 02Sportsdirect6d ago£98.99£130.00−24%
- 03Pro:Direct Running2d ago£128.96£130.00−1%
- 04Decathlon11d ago£129.99£130.00−0%
- 05AdidasLIVE£130.00
- 06VeryLIVE£140.00
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Price history
Our verdict
The Supernova Rise 3 is adidas doing the sensible thing well: a cushioned, neutral daily training shoe built to soak up easy miles rather than chase a time. It sits squarely in the do-everything daily-trainer bracket, with a 35mm heel and a 7.8mm drop giving you a protective, slightly rockered ride that suits steady runs and building a base. At 264g it is not the lightest daily shoe out there, and you feel that weight when you try to pick up the pace. That is the honest trade-off here. This is a comfort-first running shoe, not a tempo tool. If you loved the Supernova Rise 2, this is a familiar, refined step on. In our view it earns its keep as the shoe you reach for most mornings, and at a £130 RRP it is priced to be exactly that.
Key features
- 35mm cushioned stackSoaks up hard pavement and keeps your legs fresh on long easy runs
- Gentle rocker geometryRolls you smoothly through each stride so easy running feels effortless
- Wide, planted platformGives a stable, secure ride even as you tire, despite being a neutral shoe
- 7.8mm dropA moderate heel-to-toe angle that suits heel and midfoot strikers alike
- Comfort-first engineered upperWraps your foot in a soft, breathable hold with no break-in needed
Who it suits
Who should buy it
- Runners wanting one comfortable shoe for the bulk of their easy weekly miles
- Heel strikers who want a protective, high-stack landing
- Higher-mileage runners who value long-run comfort over speed
- Neutral runners after a stable, planted daily ride
Who should not buy it
- You want a light, snappy shoe for tempo runs or races
- You need genuine stability or motion control for over-pronation
- You prefer a firm, connected, ground-feel ride
- You have narrow feet and struggle to lock down a roomier fit
Best uses
Extra information
Fit & sizing
The Supernova Rise 3 comes up true to size for most runners, so take your usual number and you will be fine. The fit is a touch on the roomier side of standard through the forefoot, which is welcome on longer easy runs when your feet swell, though runners with genuinely narrow feet may find they need to cinch the laces harder for a locked-in feel. The midfoot wraps securely and the heel hold is good, with a padded collar that grips the ankle without pinching. Toe box height is generous enough for most, so bunions and wider toes have room to splay. If you are between sizes we would stay true rather than sizing down, since this shoe is happier with a little breathing space than squeezed. For a snugger, faster fit in the adidas line the Adizero Boston 13 runs closer to the foot.
Performance breakdown
Ride & feel
Underfoot the Rise 3 feels cushioned and composed rather than lively. There is a gentle rocker that helps roll you through each stride, which keeps easy running smooth and unfussy, but the foam is tuned for protection over pop, so you will not get much snap back when you push. Hold an easy or steady pace and it just gets on with the job. Ask it to run fast and the weight and soft platform start to feel like effort. That is fine, because chasing pace is not what this shoe is for. If you want a faster daily option from the same brand the Adizero Boston 13 has far more bite, while the Rise 3 stays the comfortable cruiser of the pair.
Cushioning
Cushioning is the headline strength here. The 35mm heel and 27.2mm forefoot give you a genuinely protective stack that takes the edge off hard pavement, and it holds up well as the miles stack up on long easy runs. It leans soft and forgiving rather than firm and responsive, so tired legs and higher-mileage weeks are where it shines. Heel strikers get plenty of material to land into, and the ride stays consistent from the first mile to the last. If you prefer a firmer, more connected feel underfoot, this softer setup may feel a little muted, but for daily comfort and long-run protection it does exactly what a modern cushioned trainer should.
Stability
This is a neutral shoe, not a stability one, so it has no medial post or corrective structure. That said, the wide, high-stack platform and the way the midsole flares under the foot give it a naturally planted, stable feel for a neutral trainer. Most neutral runners and mild over-pronators will feel supported enough on easy and long runs. If you are a runner who genuinely needs guidance or motion control, this is not the shoe for you and you should look at a dedicated stability trainer instead. For everyone else, the broad base makes it an easy, secure ride that does not tip or wobble as you tire.
Upper & comfort
The upper is built for comfort over the long haul. An engineered mesh gives you a soft, accommodating hold with enough structure to keep the foot in place, and the padded tongue and heel collar make it an easy shoe to pull on for daily miles. Breathability is solid for a cushioned trainer, so it stays comfortable on warmer runs without feeling flimsy. Lockdown through the midfoot is dependable once the laces are set, and there are no obvious hot spots or seams to break in. It is a fuss-free, plush upper that matches the shoe's easy-day brief rather than a stripped-back racing feel.
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FAQ
Specifications
| Category | daily |
| Surface | Road |
| Drop | 7.8mm |
| Heel Stack | 35mm |
| Forefoot Stack | 27.2mm |
| Weight | 264g |
| Carbon Plated | No |
| Stability | No |
