Most reviews of the Puma Magnify Nitro 2 will tell you it is a softer Nike Invincible at half the price. The honest answer is that it is its own shoe, with its own quirks, and pretending it is a clone of something more famous does no one any favours. The Magnify Nitro 2 lands in India at ₹12,999 with a 38 mm heel stack, 10 mm drop, no plate, and a Nitro foam midsole designed for one job: max-cushion daily miles. Whether that is what you need depends entirely on the kind of running you actually do — not the kind you think you do.
The category nobody is honest about
Max-cushion daily trainers are the most over-bought category in Indian running. Every running publication recommends them. Every shoe brand pushes them. Every runner thinks they need one. Most do not. They need a balanced daily trainer with adequate cushioning and a separate tempo shoe. Two shoes, not three, not four.
Max-cushion shoes earn their place in two scenarios. You are running long — 20 km plus — on Indian roads that punish your knees. Or you are running every day, with no rest day, and you need cushioning to absorb the cumulative load. If neither of those describes your week, you are paying for foam you do not use.
What "max-cushion" actually buys you
At 38 mm heel stack, the Magnify Nitro 2 sits in the cushioned-daily tier rather than the pure max-cushion tier dominated by the Nike Invincible 3, Hoka Skyflow, and Asics Nimbus 26. Calling it max-cushion is a marketing decision more than a structural one. That is not a complaint. The 38 mm stack is plenty for most Indian runners, and the lower height means a more stable, less wobbly ride than the 40 mm-plus competitors.
If you are over 80 kg and pounding out 60 km a week, the lower stack will serve your stability better than a taller competitor. If you are 60 kg and looking for the marshmallow-soft sensation of a true max-cushion shoe, you might find this firmer than expected. Try before you buy. Our gear shoes section covers fit-testing options across major Indian cities.
The 10 mm drop fight nobody wants to have
The Magnify Nitro 2 runs a 10 mm drop. Most modern daily trainers have moved to 6 to 8 mm. Brands have spent five years selling Indian runners on lower drops, lower drops, lower drops. Then they release a 10 mm shoe and call it innovation. I am calling that out.
Is 10 mm bad? No. It is the drop most Indian runners actually grew up with. Heel-first runners — the majority — get a smoother transition through ground contact with a higher drop. Calf-strain-prone runners get less Achilles loading. The 10 mm drop is not a bug. It is a feature for a specific runner.
Who the 10 mm drop suits
Heel strikers logging high mileage benefit from a higher drop. Runners returning from Achilles tendinopathy benefit. Runners over 35 who started with traditional running shoes and never quite adapted to 6 mm minimalism benefit. If that is you, the Magnify Nitro 2 is a more honest fit than a 6 mm trainer.
Forefoot strikers and runners who already run comfortably in lower-drop shoes will feel the height. They will not be slower in the shoe, but they will be aware of it. That awareness fades in a few runs.
The 295 g weight problem
295 g per shoe in a UK 9 is heavy. Not catastrophically heavy, but heavy enough that you will feel it on tempo days. Pumas sales sheets will not lead with this number. I will.
For pure daily mileage, 295 g is fine. For runners who occasionally want to inject a 5 km tempo into a base run, the weight reduces willingness to push pace. This is a max-cushion daily trainer. Treat it like one. Buy something lighter for tempo work.
What pairs with this in a rotation
A clean two-shoe rotation for an Indian runner training for a marathon: the Magnify Nitro 2 for easy and long days, and a plated trainer or carbon-plate shoe for workouts and races. The super-shoe comparison for 2026 lays out current carbon options. Our shoe comparison tool helps you pair models from different brands without ending up with two shoes that do the same job.
The price argument and why it matters
At ₹12,999, the Magnify Nitro 2 sits well below the ₹16,000 to ₹20,000 zone occupied by the Nike Invincible 3, Hoka Skyflow, and Asics Nimbus 26. That is the entire point of the shoe.
The price gap exists because Puma made specific trade-offs. No plate. A simpler outsole. A heavier total weight. Less aggressive foam geometry. Are those trade-offs worth the savings? For most Indian runners running 30 to 50 km per week, absolutely. The Invincible 3 is a better shoe in laboratory metrics. It is not 50 percent better. It is maybe 15 to 20 percent better. The Magnify Nitro 2 returns more of your money to your bank account.
The durability question
Nitro foam holds up well across the Puma performance line. Expect 600 to 800 km of useful life from this shoe under normal Indian conditions, with the outsole being the limiting factor rather than the midsole. Heavier runners will see the lower end of that range. Runners on smoother surfaces will see the higher end.
That is competitive with anything else in this price bracket. Do not pay extra for a brand name that does not deliver more kilometres per rupee.
The honest verdict
Most reviews will tell you the Magnify Nitro 2 is a great value pick. That is true but lazy. The accurate verdict is more specific.
Buy the Magnify Nitro 2 if you are an Indian runner training for a half marathon or marathon, running 30 to 60 km per week on roads, and you want a single dedicated easy-day shoe to anchor your rotation. The 10 mm drop suits heel strikers. The 38 mm stack suits runners over 70 kg. The price suits anyone tired of paying premium for marginal gains.
Skip the Magnify Nitro 2 if you run under 25 km a week, if you prefer lower-drop shoes, or if you already own a cushioned daily trainer that works. Cycling through shoes for the sake of new ones is a marketing strategy, not a training strategy.
Where to start instead
Before you spend on any shoe, build the training that makes it useful. Our STRIDD training plan generator sets the volume, the workouts, and the race goal that turn this shoe into a tool. The full Puma archive covers the rest of the lineup if the Magnify Nitro 2 is not the right pick for your week.
The shoe is not the answer. The shoe serves the answer. Plan first, buy second.