Possibly Puma’s best race shoe we have tested, and a serious PB contender. Our only question is how long they will last. Well, that's one question. The other question is how many casual runners are willing to shell out almost six thousand a pair to go faster than they did yesterday.
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Design
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Comfort
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Performance
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Value
There are fast shoes, and then there are shoes that make you feel fast before you’ve even left your driveway. The Puma Deviate Elite 4 falls firmly into the latter category. A featherweight race-day weapon that doesn’t just tick boxes, it sprints past them.
Straight out of the box, the first thing that hits you is the weight. Or rather, the lack of it. At an incredibly light 147g, this shoe feels like Puma forgot to include half of it. Thankfully, it didn’t forget the important bits.
Surprisingly friendly

Puma’s Ultraweave upper is doing some serious heavy lifting by doing almost nothing at all. It’s thin, breathable, and barely there, yet somehow still wraps the foot with its snug, run-ready fit. There’s minimal structure, so runners who prefer a more supportive hug might raise an eyebrow, but if you’re used to lightweight trainers, you’ll feel right at home.
It’s also refreshingly approachable for a carbon-plated shoe. You don’t need to be an elite-level runner to get along with it. Seasoned runners will find it fast but not intimidatingly aggressive.
Wet roads? No worries

Johannesburg rain and oily tar are usually a recipe for problems. Not here. Our first outing with the Nitro Deviate Elite 4 was in the rain, and Puma’s Pumagrip outsole stuck confidently to the slippery roads. Even during the rainy 10km race, the Elite 4 felt planted and trustworthy, luckily resulting in no sketchy moments or mid-race panic. And believe it or not, a PB!
Underfoot: less bulk, more bounce

The midsole has been trimmed down, shedding weight without sacrificing cushioning. Puma’s updated Nitrofoam Elite blend feels lively, delivering noticeable energy return without being over-the-top trampoline nonsense.
Paired with the full-length carbon PWRPLATE, the ride is efficient. The magic here is that the propulsion feels totally natural. Sadly, they can’t run fast for you, but they do make faster running feel easier. That’s a rare trick and definitely a necessary one for the average runner.
Run-feel

It’s when you’re in motion that the Deviate Elite 4 really shines. You hardly notice it on your foot. It lets you get on with the job. Strides feel smoother, paces feel easier, and suddenly your watch is showing numbers you didn’t quite expect. It’s the kind of shoe that quietly nudges you into a PB attempt and then backs you up when you go for it.
The details that matter

The ungusseted tongue is lightly padded and comfortable. The flat serrated laces lock everything down and stay secure. The fit is true to size, with a slightly wider feel than previous versions, which many runners will welcome.
The numbers
• Weight: 147g (yes, really) UK 7
• Stack height: 40mm heel / 32mm forefoot
• Drop: 8mm
• Best for: Speed sessions and race days from 5kms up to marathon
• Price R5,800
Puma Deviate Elite 4 verdict

The Puma Deviate Elite 4 is one of those rare shoes that make running feel easy. It’s light, fast, stable, and surprisingly forgiving for a carbon racer. More importantly, it delivers where it counts: helping you run faster than your perceived effort suggests. And let’s be honest, whether you’re a plodder, seasoned runner, or an elite athlete, we’re all chasing that feeling.
If you’re hunting for your next race-day advantage, this might just be it.




