Let’s get this out of the way: I wanted to hate Aztech Mountain’s Nuke Suit jacket from the get-go. My reasons were based purely on speculation and derived entirely from my own subjective experience growing up and skiing in Vermont. Skiing, I might argue, is one of the most exclusive sports in the world due to the exorbitant costs necessitated by gear and lift tickets — not to mention travel — needed for even just a weekend on the hill. For most, the sport is totally unapproachable, and for me, someone who has loved it for years and years, skiing didn’t need another expensive piece of gear — and it sure as hell didn’t need a jacket that cost $1,650.
Let me briefly describe my relationship with skiing, for context. I grew up with a ski resort just 20 minutes from my front door and six or seven more within an hour’s drive. My dad started teaching me to ski — against my young, unappreciative will — at age four. In the winters, school let out at noon once per week so that students could take ski lessons at the mountain in the afternoon. Season passes to Stratton (where a single day lift ticket now costs $115) were free through high school, thanks to a community-run initiative. Becoming a skier was inevitable, and it was also relatively cheap.
Despite my total indoctrination into the sport, I have always been wary of its classist trappings. My friends and I watched ski and snowboard videos and tried to adopt the laid-back style of the riders we saw, and certainly took on many of their anti-mainstream views. At the mountain, we were local punks, and anyone with a fancy-looking parka was a yuppie flatlander (and a potential target for any well-placed snowballs thrown from the chairlift). Clothing was important; it didn’t matter if a jacket was as waterproof as a sponge. As long as it looked cool, it was cool.

My gear priorities have since changed. I’m entirely concerned with performance, but that doesn’t mean aesthetics aren’t important. Nevertheless, when I saw the hefty price tag on Aztech Mountain’s Nuke Suit, I was forced to suppress my teenage angst in order to dig deeper. Why should a jacket cost this much? How can it be worth it? The only way to find out was to give it a try.
I tested the Nuke Suit in Sun Valley, Idaho over the course of a late February weekend. The first thing I noticed about the jacket was the complexity of its interior paneling and stitching. Stretch and ventilation fabrics are placed in targeted zones. The exterior, however, leans on simplicity. There is essentially no exposed stitching (common points of failure on jackets) — the down baffles are created with thermal welding instead. The pockets, and their angular zippers, lie flat. Even the velcro cuffs are thoughtfully tailored. When it comes to construction, Aztech certainly spared no detail.
When I did ultimately slip on and zip up the Nuke Suit in Sun Valley’s over-the-top-glamorous River Run Lodge, it was, to my dismay, immediately comfortable. The jacket is trim and tailored, following a more Euro-inspired cut; the bottom hem sits at the waist and the sleeves at the wrists. It didn’t feel loose or roomy like the ski jackets of my youth (it ain’t baggy).