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What Is Your Tent or Rain Jacket Made From? (2025): Dyneema, Silpoly, X-Pac
Gaming Gear

What Is Your Tent or Rain Jacket Made From? (2025): Dyneema, Silpoly, X-Pac

by admin September 26, 2025


Spend any time at all researching outdoor gear, whether it’s a new tent or a new rain jacket, and you’ll quickly find yourself awash in a confusing array of jargon. Silnylon, polyurethane, X-Pac, cuben fiber, ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE)—what are these things?

What none of them are is perfect. Each has its own weight, cost, benefits, and drawbacks. But there is a fabric that’s perfect for you and your particular use case. We put this guide together to help you strip away the marketing and better understand what each fabric does, what it’s best used for, and where it struggles.

Table of Contents

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Outdoor Fabric Types

Let’s start by breaking this down into the various fibers and materials used in outdoor gear. We’ll skip some of the older things, like waxed canvas, since most people are familiar with it. Here are the most commonly used fabrics in the outdoor industry today.

What’s the Difference Between Dyneema and Cuben Fiber?

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This causes an endless amount of confusion in online backpacking forums, but there is no difference. They are the same thing. Dyneema Composite Fabric (DCF) used to be called cuben fiber (and also sometimes “non-woven Dyneema”). It was originally developed to make sails for racing yachts (where it’s still used, in addition to dozens of other uses).

The company that first brought it to market was called Cubic Tech, which was then acquired by a Dutch company, Koninklijke DSM, which renamed cuben fiber “Dyneema Composite Fabric.” (Koninklijke was then bought by the Swiss company Firmenich AG and the acronym DSM now refers to the company DSM-Firmenich AG.)

Silnylon

The oldest of the bunch, this term refers to silicone-coated ripstop nylon. This versatile fabric is widely used in tents, some (nonbreathable) rain gear, stuff sacks, and many other pieces of gear. Its strengths are durability, high tear strength, and waterproofing. The downside to nylon is that it absorbs water—even, unfortunately, when coated with silicone. Hence the DWR treatments, but even with those, at some point nylon will wet out and start absorbing water. This is why your tent’s rainfly sags when it gets soaked. Nylon is also slow to dry.

Polyester

This is another very versatile, widely used fabric with one huge advantage over nylon: It doesn’t absorb nearly as much water. This means it doesn’t sag as much. This is particularly important in ultralight backpacking tents that pitch with trekking poles. Sag isn’t just annoying, it’s a loss of structural integrity and can collapse your tent. The downside to polyester is that it’s not as strong as silnylon in many cases (it especially tends to tear), and possibly not as durable over the long run. That said, I personally find this downside to be overstated. I have two tents with polyester rain flies that have help up well over the course of nearly 20 years of use.

Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

Nemo Osmo

What if you could blend the best qualities of nylon (durable, strong) with the best qualities of polyester (hydrophobic, less stretching)? That’s the question that led Nemo Equipment to develop its Osmo fabric, a proprietary blend of nylon and polyester. I’ve been testing Nemo’s Osmo line of tents since they debuted in 2022 and have found that Osmo does indeed manage to sag less that straight nylon rainflies.

X-Pac

This is a laminated fabric that starts with a nylon face, lays in a polyester grid, then a PET plastic layer to provide waterproofing, and finally, a nylon backing to protect the more fragile inner layers. The advantage over ripstop nylon is the waterproof layer, which is better in most cases than even silnylon. X-Pac comes in various weights, but the most common in packs (which is where I’ve found X-Pac really excels) are VX21 and VX42. These thicker, heavier, versions of X-Pac are more abrasion-resistant and still remain about 20 percent lighter than silnylon in a similar denier. The downside for X-Pac is that it can be a little fragile, especially when it come to abrasion.

Dyneema Composite Fabric

In the outdoor industry, Dyneema is the most recognized brand name of a composite material made of woven ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE). UHMWPE is a widely used in many industries for many things (including bulletproof vests), but the version that shows up in tents and packs is, like Dyneema, fibers that have been spun together and then layered into a fabric. Hence, the name Dyneema Composite Fabric (DCF).

The resulting fabric is 15 times stronger than steel per weight. That fabric is then sandwiched between outer layers (usually polyester) so that a waterproof coating can be applied (it won’t stick to the DCF directly).

Dyneema is incredibly strong, like off-the-charts strong compared to nylon and polyester. It’s also very light and waterproof, all of which have made it a favorite among ultralight hikers and backpackers looking to shave off the ounces. Dyneema’s weakness is abrasion. I have seen the corner of a Dyneema rainfly beaten to shreds by wind in a single night of flapping against sandstone. It’s easy to repair, but also very expensive relative to nylon and polyester, and it doesn’t pack down as small. However, properly used and cared for, Dyneema is unquestionably the strongest, lightest fabric in this list, making it excellent for packs, stuff sacks, and tents.

Ecopak/Ultra

Ecopack is another fabric that comes to ultralight hiking from the world of sailing, where it was originally used for, well, sails. This is another UHMWPE face fabric, laminated to a waterproof lining. You’ll see this fabric under brand names like EPL Ultra, Ultra 100, Ultra 200, and Ecopak Ultra, among others. The numbers generally correspond to the denier, so Ultra 200 uses a 210 denier face fabric. But that fabric is also woven UHMWPE fibers (about 70 percent for Ultra 200), making it much more abrasion resistant than Dyneema Composite.

Courtesy of Dyneema

Dyneema Woven Composite

Dyneema recently introduced a new fabric, Dyneema Woven Composite (DWC), which marries a fully woven Dyneema face fabric to DCF. Right now, only Hyperlite Mountain Gear packs use this new fabric, but we expect to see others adopt it going forward as it improves Dyneema’s abrasion resistance. It will be interesting to compare DWC to Ultra since DWC is essentially DSM’s answer to Ultra. We’ll update this guide when we have more time to test DWC packs.

Other Fabric Factors

If you look at the above and judged solely on what I laid out, you’d probably by a huge fan of Dyneema and Ultra, especially if you’re into ultralight backpacking and you’re aiming for base gear weight (before food and water) of less than 10 pounds. Unfortunately, other factors within each fabric also affect how well it performs, so it’s hard to make apples to apples comparisons.

For instance, there is a huge difference between ripstop nylons used across the industry. Grab a cheapo nylon tent off Amazon and compare it to a Hilleberg tent and you’ll quickly realize that, aside from both being made of the same base material (nylon) they have nothing in common. This is where factors like thread count, calendaring, denier, weave type, and more come into play.

What Is Denier?

Denier is probably the strangest unit of measurement you’ll ever encounter. Denier is the weight in grams for 9 km of thread. So 9km of Hilleberg’s Kerlon 1800 weighs 40 grams. What does that tell you? Pretty much nothing, but it’s a useful way to compare fabrics and know, for instance, that Hilleberg’s Red label tents, which only use 30D ripstop nylon are not as strong as the models made with 40D.

The reason Hilleberg tents are so well made, and last for decades, is that the custom nylon blend and weave the company uses are better than what you’ll find on other “nylon” tents. Hilleberg’s nylon, which the company calls Kerlon, is 40D high tenacity ripstop nylon, which is made for high-strength expedition tents.

Denier is useful to make comparisons across manufacturers as well, so you can know that your cheapo Amazon tent with its 8D nylon won’t last nearly as long as a 30D model from more reputable brands. At the same time, denier is not the end of the story either. There are also varying levels of coatings. Remember that nylon absorbs water, so you have to apply a coating to slow that process down.

What Is Hydrostatic Head?

Another unit of measurement that you might see is hydrostatic head, which is an industry standard unit of measurement used to determine the waterproofness of a fabric. Technically speaking, it is the height in millimeters of a column of water that a fabric can withstand before liquid begins to move through the weave. Hilleberg’s Kerlon fabrics also coat both sides with a 3-layer application of 100 percent silicon, which gives the nylon an HH rating of 5500mm and make the fabric much stronger.

Weaves and Coatings

To showcase another way in which all these rating and measurements are not the end of the story, we’ll consider one more tent maker, Durston, which recently dropped the denier of its polyester fabric X-mid tents from 20D to 15D. That sounds like Durston made a weaker tent, but according to the company, the new high-strength 15D polyester offers “96 percent of the strength of the 20D while being lighter.” The company simply changed the weave and the coating.

The coatings are also different. Unlike Hilleberg, Durston uses a silicone coating on the outside of its rainfly and a polyether coating on the inside. The hydrostatic head for the X-mid is 3500, which is plenty to keep you dry. Having spent rainy nights in both the new Durston X-mid and a Hilleberg Akto, I can assure you that, while each company has taken a different path to the finished product, both tents are strong, well-made, and waterproof. The result is same—you stay dry.

A Word on Dyneema

Dyneema and other UHMWPE fabrics like Ultra are definitely the most exciting fabrics in outdoor gear right now. They overcome two major downsides of nylon and polyester: they’re lighter and they don’t absorb water. Much of the push into outdoor gear made of Dyneema has come from ultralight backpackers trying to reduce their pack weight.

As noted above, Dyneema’s strength is its resistance to tearing, which makes it a great option for tents, packs, and everyday items like stuff sacks. While many larger brands have now embraced Dyneema, it was really the small, cottage industry brands that have driven innovation.



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September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Dying Light: The Beast developers are working on fixes for broken day-night cycles and indoor rain
Game Updates

Dying Light: The Beast developers are working on fixes for broken day-night cycles and indoor rain

by admin September 22, 2025



Techland’s Dying Light: The Beast launched last week and is, sources say, “a good Dying Light game, and a fine open-world zombie game in general, full of crunchy combat and simple but satisfying number-go-up loops”. Being a new videogame, it also has some bugs. The most dramatic of these appear to be problems with its day/night cycle and weather system.


On the one hand, you’ve got rain falling inside buildings. I quite like this one, myself. I grew up with 3D first-person games that had slightly magic precipitation. I used to enjoy wobbling back and forth in entrances, trying to coax the weather into following me in-doors. I actually feel slightly dissatisfied when I play one of those fancy modern shooters in which water bounces off corrugated metal roofing as it should.


On the other hand, Techland say they’ve identified some problems with the day-night cycle, inasmuch as it sometimes stops cycling. This seems more urgent, because Dying Light: The Beast is a very different game in the dark. You’ll have to worry about Volatile zombos who are both resilient and inconveniently athletic, capable of chasing you all over the scenery while making frightful gargling noises in your ear. A few Redditors report encountering Volatiles in blazing sunlight. Others say they can’t seem to progress their worlds beyond mid-morning, which doesn’t seem quite as harrowing.


Techland are working on a PC hotfix for these things, but say they need to take their time testing the patch, because these particular issues aren’t that frequent and they don’t want to screw up anything else. “We already have a fix prepared, but because this bug only appears in rare situations, it takes a lot of extra testing,” reads a post on Steam from yesterday. “We’ll continue these tests over the weekend and most of Monday, and if no new occurrences of this issue appear, we’ll release the hotfix to players right away on PC. This is our goal.


“If, however, we still spot any occurrences of the bug, we might need to go back, adjust the fix, and then re-test it again,” the developers caution. “Thank you for your patience. We know these issues are frustrating to those who experience them, and we’re doing everything we can to deliver a stable solution as soon as possible.”


As is tradition, Techland’s promises have met with an avalanche of comments telling them that they’re prioritising the wrong fixes. Some people are mad about the frame rate, others complain about getting stuck in falling animations and quests not progressing. It doesn’t seem like there are any catastrophic problems with the current PC build, but I’m keen to hear your thoughts, as ever. As for myself, I’ve played about three hours of Dying Light: The Beast, including 30 minutes of preview time, and I think that’s probably enough for me. I like scampering over roofs but I just can’t be arsed re-killing zombies any more.



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September 22, 2025 0 comments
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The Beast Is Being Ruined By An Annoying Rain Bug
Game Reviews

The Beast Is Being Ruined By An Annoying Rain Bug

by admin September 22, 2025


I’m really enjoying Dying Light: The Beast, the latest open-world zombie RPG from Techland. However, when it starts to rain in The Beast, the game starts to become a hard-to-play mess that is ruining what is otherwise a damn fine experience. Thankfully, the devs are aware and are working on a patch.

Originally planned to be a big DLC expansion for 2022’s Dying Light 2, Techland eventually realized it was big enough to be its own standalone game. And after playing about 16 hours of the zombie RPG–which is out now on consoles and sees the return of OG protagonist Kyle Crane–I think it might end up being one of my favorite games of 2025. Techland has once again successfully blended horror, parkour, and melee-focused action into something great. Setting the whole game in the gorgeous Swiss Alps also doesn’t hurt. But apparently, in the Alps, they have much more powerful rainstorms than over here.

Last night, while in the middle of a quest to grab some special gas that attracts super zombies, it started to rain. “No big deal,” I thought to myself, unaware of what I was about to experience. When I reached a large refinery containing a secret lab where the gas was located, I fought my way in and discovered that uh, the rain was falling through the building. And making things worse, the game’s lighting tech seemed (understandably) unprepared for such an event to occur, and it became very dark and incredibly hard to see where I was going. I pressed on and discovered the super rain also appeared in cutscenes.

Once I got a big can of the super gas, I took it to a nearby truck and popped it in the back to more easily get it to my destination. Weirdly, the rain outside was gone. Props still looked wet, and I could hear the rain falling, yet nothing was falling from the sky. When I got in the truck I discovered that, as far as the game was concerned, it wasn’t raining anymore, which was awkward as my windshield was still being drenched in water, but the wipers wouldn’t work. The only way I could get the wipers to function was to run over zombies and get enough blood on the glass to trigger them. Eventually, I just drove backwards, as the truck’s rear window wasn’t covered in rain.

©Techland / Kotaku

Techland has a fix incoming for Dying Light‘s indoor rain

After winning a boss fight and returning to a safe zone to complete the quest, I decided to reset the game, which did put a stop to the strange weather. But now I fear the rain’s return. Thankfully, Techland is working on a patch that it plans to push out very soon.

“We’re aware that you’re experiencing issues with Indoor Rain and the Disturbed Day/Night Cycle, and fixing them is our top priority,” said Techland in an update posted to Steam over the weekend. “We already have a fix prepared, but because this bug only appears in rare situations, it takes a lot of extra testing. We’ll continue these tests over the weekend and most of Monday, and if no new occurrences of this issue appear, we’ll release the hotfix to players right away on PC. This is our goal. If, however, we still spot any occurrences of the bug, we might need to go back, adjust the fix, and then re-test it again.”

So that’s good news. But even after the patch, I’ll still be nervous that the super rain will return. Perhaps it’s the same horrible rain we dealt with years ago in the remastered version of Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas? Where will this annoying rain appear next? Is any game safe? We’ll keep you updated on the rain situation as it continues.

Update: 9/22/2025, 12:55 p.m. ET: Just a few moments after posting this, Techland pushed out the rain-fixing patch on PC. The developer says the update is coming to consoles “soon.”



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September 22, 2025 0 comments
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man looking upset next to Three Kingdoms Kill Online gameplay
Esports

Man in China goes viral after sitting in the rain for hours analyzing a chess match

by admin August 31, 2025



A man in the Hebei providence, an area of Northern China, has gone viral for losing a match of Xiangqi. The match isn’t what made him go viral, though. It’s what he did after.

Xiangqi is one of the most popular board games in both China and Vietnam and has been played for centuries. It’s often called Chinese chess or Elephant chess due to a number of similarities between both games. They’re both difficult for their own reasons.

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Chess grandmasters have gone to great lengths and committed years of their lives to perfecting their craft. The same is true for Xiangqi, as was shown by one man who spent hours thinking about a match while sitting in the middle of a massive storm.

Chinese man goes viral for analyzing Xiangqi match

After losing at around 5pm, the man could be seen urging his competitor to come back to the table after the match in a video from the South China Morning Post.

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Footage shows him sitting there for four hours, with the table looking almost the same as he left it. He was moving the pieces around in stages, moving them back to how he lost.

And, while this may seem ridiculous to some, others have spoken out about his level of dedication and could relate with his feelings.

Chess grandmaster Hans Niemann recounted a time where he had similar feelings, sitting in the rain for hours after a tough loss.

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“In 2019, I was leading the U16 World Youth championships in Mumbai, got food poisoning, lost 3 games in a row. I laid by the pool and it started raining. Then it started thundering, some of my friends tried to drag me inside but I stayed there for hours,” he claimed.

It’s hard to say whether or not the man figured out why he lost the match, but his dedication hasn’t gone unnoticed.

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August 31, 2025 0 comments
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Decrypt logo
NFT Gaming

Fintech Rain Raises $58 Million to Fuel Stablecoin Push on Visa Network

by admin August 30, 2025



In brief

  • Stablecoin fintech Rain has raised $58 million.
  • The Visa-backed company, which issues cards, has raised a total of $88.5 million from big backers like Sapphire Ventures, Dragonfly, Galaxy Ventures, and Samsung Next.
  • Stablecoins are a hot topic since President Donald Trump signed the GENIUS Act.

Stablecoin-backed card company Rain, which partnered with Visa this year, has raised $58 million as part of a series B funding round, the company said in an announcement Thursday. 

The raise brings the company’s total funding to $88.5 million. Rain, which closed its A round five months ago, said the money would be used to grow the firm’s platform and “give global institutions the most flexible, modular, and compliant stablecoin infrastructure available.”

Venture capital firm Sapphire Ventures led the funding round, with Dragonfly, Galaxy Ventures, Endeavor Catalyst, Samsung Next, Lightspeed, and Norwest also contributing. 



“Stablecoins are shifting to the backbone of global commerce,” Rain CEO and co-founder Farooq Malik said. “In its earliest form, money moved instantly. We’ve spent centuries slowing it down.”

Rain this year partnered with Visa to push ahead with its stablecoin-linked cards. 

In the release, Rain said that is intent on making stablecoins “instantly usable anywhere Visa is accepted through its physical and virtual card programs, processing millions of transactions across 150+ countries.”

The company said that it had grown transaction volume by tenfold this year with such portfolio partners as Nuvei, Avalanche, Dakota, and Nomad using Rain infrastructure for merchant payouts, everyday consumer purchases, B2B spend, and cross-border payroll.

Visa has been making major inroads into the crypto space, particularly with stablecoins. In April, it partnered with Bridge, a unit of payment services provider Stripe, to offer stablecoin-linked debit cards in Latin American countries. In 2021, it announced that it supported USDC on Ethereum.

Stablecoins are digital tokens running on blockchains that are pegged to non-volatile assets, usually dollars. With a stable value, such cryptocurrencies were previously used by traders to enter and exit digital asset trades without the need for banks.

But now, banks, major companies, including Meta and Amazon, and even U.S. states are all interested in issuing the tokens, which are supposed to accelerate payments leveraging blockchain technology. 

U.S. President Donald Trump in July signed the GENIUS Act into law, establishing a framework for issuing and trading stablecoins in the U.S.

“Stablecoins have scaled to hundreds of billions in circulation, but until now, they couldn’t be easily spent,” said Sapphire Ventures President Jai Das, who will join Rain’s board. “Rain is working to fix that by connecting stablecoins to Visa’s global network, turning them into money you can actually use for everyday commerce.”

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August 30, 2025 0 comments
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Crypto VC funding: Rain raises $58m, OrangeX secures $20m
GameFi Guides

Rain raises $58m, OrangeX secures $20m

by admin August 30, 2025



This past week saw nearly $235 million in crypto VC funding with several notable funding rounds, led by Rain, which raised $58 million in Series B funding for its stablecoin interoperability platform.

Other key investments include M^0, securing $40 million for its decentralized middleware protocol, and OrangeX, which raised $20 million for its global crypto trading platform.

Additionally, aPriori gathered $20 million in a strategic round for its work in DeFi, liquidity, and staking. Other projects such as Hemi Labs, The Clearing Company, and Magne AI also raised significant funds, highlighting continued investor confidence across the crypto space.

Series B funding rounds dominated the activity this week. Here’s a breakdown of this week’s crypto funding developments, according to Crypto Fundraising data.

Summary

  • Crypto VC raised $234.9m this week, led by Rain’s $58m Series B round
  • M^0 raised $40m Series B, while OrangeX secured $20m for expansion
  • Smaller projects raised $1.5m–$15m, showing strong sector diversity

Rain

  • Rain raised $58 million in a Series B round that included Sapphire Ventures, Dragonfly, and Galaxy Digital.
  • The project is a stablecoin interoperability platform that has raised $88.5 million to date.

M^0

  • M^0, a decentralized middleware protocol, secured $40 million in a Series B round.
  • Polychain Capital, Ribbit Capital, and Endeavor backed the startup, which has raised $97.5 million to date.

OrangeX

  • OrangeX, a global crypto trading platform, collected $20 million in a Series B round
  • Investors include Kryptos and SCI Ventures; OrangeX has raised $30 million to date.

🚀 We are thrilled to announce that 🍊#OrangeX has secured $20M in our second funding round!

Led by Kryptos with continued support from key investors, this achievement accelerates our mission to deliver world-class compliant crypto trading.

✅ Over $200M platform liquidity
🏆… pic.twitter.com/TXY13Gr2pF

— OrangeX (@OrangeXExchange) August 29, 2025

aPriori

  • The project gathered $20 million in a strategic round. The startup operates in DeFi, liquidity, and staking sectors
  • HashKey Capital, Pantera, and Primitive Ventures are aPriori’s investors.

Projects < $20 million

  • Hemi Labs, $15 million in an unknown round
  • The Clearing Company, $15 million in a Seed round
  • Magne AI, $10 million in a Strategic round
  • Hyperbot, $6.75 million in an unknown round
  • Metafyed, $5.5 million in an unknown round
  • Multipli, $5 million in an unknown round
  • Splendor Labs, $4.5 million in a Seed round
  • Almanak, $2.5 million in a Public sale
  • Superfluid, $2 million in a Public sale
  • Suzaku, $1.5 million in an unknown round
  • Fly (ex Magpie Protocol), $340,000 in an unknown round





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August 30, 2025 0 comments
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