Two maximalist trail shoes, priced ₹500 apart. The Hoka Mafate 5 at ₹17,999 and the Altra Olympus 6 at ₹17,499 are not the same shoe. They are not even arguing about the same thing. The Mafate is a curved-plate, 8 mm drop ultra missile aimed at the long, hard hours of an Indian ultra. The Olympus is a 0 mm drop, plateless, foot-shaped cathedral that asks you to land flat and let the foam do the rest. Choose wrong and you will spend the back half of a 50K wondering why your calves are on fire or your knees are filing a complaint. So before you tap pay on Hoka.com or Altra's India site, here is the honest fight.
The verified specs, side by side
This is the spec sheet, and only the spec sheet. Numbers come from the brands' own 2026 product pages. Anything beyond this table is interpretation, not invention.
| Spec | Hoka Mafate 5 | Altra Olympus 6 |
|---|---|---|
| Category | Ultra / max-stack trail | Ultra / max-stack trail, zero-drop |
| Drop | 8 mm | 0 mm |
| Heel stack | 45 mm | 33 mm |
| Forefoot stack | 37 mm | 33 mm |
| Weight (US 9) | 314 g | 320 g |
| Foam | PROFLY+ | EGO MAX |
| Plate | Curved TPU forefoot | None |
| Best for | Long-distance trail / ultra | Zero-drop ultra-trail max cushion |
| India price | ₹17,999 | ₹17,499 |
Six grams between them. Twelve millimetres of heel stack between them. Eight millimetres of drop between them. The weights are nearly identical. Everything else is a different philosophy. Run the full compare if you want every dimension stacked up, but the table above is where the decision actually sits.
How the geometry plays out on Indian trails
Start with the drop, because that is where these two stop being friends.
The Mafate's 8 mm drop on a 45 mm heel is a forward-biased ride. Your heel sits eight millimetres higher than your forefoot, your tibia tips slightly forward, and gravity does part of the work of moving you down the trail. On a long climb at hour four of a Western Ghats ultra, that forward bias is a small mercy. On a tired descent into Bamboo Forest's last loop, the curved TPU plate in the forefoot smooths the roll-through so your foot does not have to fight the foam for momentum. You feel held.
The Olympus 6 sits at 0 mm drop on a 33 mm stack — flat, foot-shaped, FootShape toebox. Same height under your heel as under your toes. Your calves and Achilles take the load that a higher drop would have transferred to your quads. If you have spent years running in 0 mm Altras, this feels like home. If you have not, it does not feel like home — it feels like a small revolt below the knee for the first two or three weeks. Heavy as the Mafate. Six grams heavier, actually.
Indian trails do not reward one philosophy over the other in the abstract. They reward the shoe whose geometry your body has earned the right to use. Read the Mafate 5 single-shoe review and the Olympus 6 single-shoe review for the long versions of how each ride feels.
Foam, plate, and what happens at hour eight
The Mafate's PROFLY+ is a dual-density compound — softer at the heel, firmer at the forefoot. Paired with the curved TPU forefoot plate, it does two things at once: it eats the cumulative impact of a long descent, and it gives you a quiet, propulsive roll at toe-off when your form is going to be the first thing to leave you. TPU is meaningfully softer than carbon, so the plate does not lock the foot into a rigid bend. On a rocky Sahyadri trail, that compliance matters. The foot still articulates around what is under it. The plate's job here is geometric stability, not propulsion.
The Olympus 6's EGO MAX foam is a different bet. No plate. The full 33 mm of stack is foam underfoot, and Altra is asking the foam to do the work that Hoka asks foam plus plate to do. EGO MAX has a soft, deep, almost mattress-like compression that some runners love at long distances and others find sluggish at runnable paces. The plate-free design means the foot moves naturally — there is nothing in there steering you. For runners whose biomechanics do not want to be steered, that is the entire pitch.
At hour eight of a 100K, here is what tends to separate them. The Mafate's higher stack absorbs more peak impact per stride; the curved plate keeps the late-race roll honest. The Olympus 6 is less protective against peak impact but lets your foot move freely, which can mean less localised hot-spotting and fewer late-race blister surprises. Different failure modes. Pick the one your body fails toward least.
Where to buy in India, and what each costs
Both shoes are available through the brands' Indian channels. The Mafate 5 is ₹17,999 on Hoka's India site and through authorised partners like Tata CLiQ Luxury and Decathlon's premium trail line in some metros. The Olympus 6 is ₹17,499 on Altra's India distribution and select specialist retailers. Browse Hoka's trail lineup or the Altra trail lineup for the wider context.
Five hundred rupees is not the decision. Geometry is. Spend ₹500 less on the shoe and you have ₹500 more for a hotel night the day before the race, or for the bus from Bengaluru to Chikmagalur, or for a second pair of trail socks. None of those things will close a six-millimetre drop gap if your body wanted that drop. Buy the geometry first; treat the price as a tiebreaker for the last 1% of indecision.
One more practical note on the India retail side: stock for both shoes runs thin during pre-race months. October, November and January — race-build months for the bulk of the Indian ultra calendar — are when both Hoka and Altra in India tend to be out of size 9 and size 10 in men's. If you have decided which shoe you want, buy it eight weeks before race day. Returns are possible through both brands' India sites within the standard window; grey-market returns are not.
The verdict, by use case
If you are an Indian ultra runner targeting 50K and beyond — Malnad Ultra, Hennur Bamboo Forest, Western Ghats, the Himalayan calendar — and you do not have a deep base in zero-drop shoes, the Hoka Mafate 5 wins. The 45 mm heel stack absorbs more cumulative impact than the Olympus 6's 33 mm. The curved TPU forefoot plate smooths your late-race roll. The 8 mm drop spares your calves the work that a 0 mm drop demands. For most Indian ultra runners, this is the more forgiving long-distance tool.
If you are a long-time Altra runner with a strong zero-drop habit, or you have biomechanics that get angry at high heel stacks, the Altra Olympus 6 wins. The 0 mm drop and FootShape toebox are not a marketing flex — they are a different proprioceptive philosophy, and runners who have earned that philosophy through years of training do not want a curved plate steering their foot through hour ten of an ultra. The Olympus 6 protects the runners who know how to use it.
If you are heavier (above 80 kg) and chasing your first ultra, the Mafate's higher stack does more proportional work for you per stride. Take the Mafate.
If you are lighter, lower-mileage, and you are using either shoe for occasional 25 to 30 km trail weekends, you are overpaying for both. Look at a versatile mid-stack trail shoe instead. Then build the training first. Use the STRIDD plan generator to map a real ultra build, and browse Running Lab for the wider gear context. The shoes are the easier half of an ultra. The block that gets you there is the hard half, and that block does not care which logo is on the heel.