Some parts grab you right away. Dashawn Jordan’s “”Home Is Where The Heart Is” Nike Part, is one of those.
The part was released on the Nike SB YouTube channel on March 16, with his new shoe being avaiable online and in skate shops the next day. The part is tied to Dashawn’s first signature Nike shoe, an SB Dunk Low, but it doesn’t play like a simple promo video. It’s a full video part with serious tricks, and some heavy bangers.
Watch the Full Part Here:
THE CLIPS EVERYONE’S GOING TO TALK ABOUT
There are two tricks that feel impossible to ignore here.
The first is the lazer flip over the rail, which is already the clip a lot of people are rewinding. The second is the ender, a massive 5-0 down a 30-stair handrail that is set to be Dashawn’s April 2026 Thrasher cover. That cover is also his first.
That alone would have been enough to make this rollout hit. But what gives the whole thing more personality is that Dashawn also made the song he skates to. Same shoe, same part, same voice behind the music. That makes the whole release feel more personal and a lot less manufactured than most brand projects.

Photo: Atiba Jefferson / Thrasher Magazine
WHY THIS ONE LANDED
Dashawn has been that guy for a while now. Great style, crazy control, and the kind of pop and confidence that makes hard tricks look settled. But this part feels bigger than a standard reminder that he is good. It feels like one of those moments where everything lines up at once.
The shoe has a clear Arizona stamp on it too. Nike SB’s release page ties the design to Dashawn’s home state, with details pulled from the Diamondbacks look and the desert feel around it. That makes the whole project feel connected instead of random.
And honestly, that is a big reason the part works. Nothing about it feels thrown together. The skating is heavy, the song belongs to him, the shoe has a real point of view, and the ender is the kind of clip that people will still be bringing up months from now.
RUN IT BACK
Was the lazer flip your favorite trick in the part, or did the 5-0 shut the whole conversation down?
Does this feel like Dashawn’s best part yet?
And where does that ender rank among the heaviest 5-0s we’ve seen in recent years?
