The Biker Babies have ridden every kind of terrain Zoomville has thrown at them: mud, gravel, night rides, rain, and at least three surfaces that definitely weren't designed for bikes. They've learned a few things. Here's what the crew would tell you.

Tip 1: Your helmet is your crew's best friend, not just yours

This one comes directly from Cinnamon, and it's not just about safety (though it's absolutely about safety). When you wear your helmet, you're not just protecting yourself — you're making sure the rest of your crew doesn't have to worry about you. The Biker Babies wear theirs every single time, no exceptions. Amara designs each one herself: personality built in, protection built in, exactly as it should be.

The rule in the crew: helmet on before the bike moves. It's not up for discussion.

Tip 2: Learn your bike before you push it

Kai pushes everything to the limit — but he knows his bike. He knows exactly how it handles on a flat surface before he tries anything on a ramp. Santiago will tell you: the bikes that hold up under pressure are the ones whose riders know them properly first. Ride slow on purpose. Notice how the bike responds to your weight, to braking, to different surfaces. That knowledge is what keeps you in control when things go fast.

Tip 3: Look where you want to go, not where you don't

This is Maddison's tip, and it sounds simple until you're on a tight track with an obstacle straight ahead and everything in you wants to stare at it. Look at the gap. Look at the clear route. Your bike will follow your eyes more than you realise. Maddison never looks at what she's avoiding. She looks at where she's going.

Tip 4: Falling is part of riding

Kai's contribution to this list. He's fallen off his bike more times than anyone else in the crew. He's also done more spectacular things on a bike than anyone else in the crew. Those two facts are connected. You learn to fall safely — which means loose, not rigid — and you learn to get back up without making it a big deal. Every rider falls. It's not failure. It's data.

Tip 5: Ride together when you can

Zeya's final word on this: your best rides are with your crew. Other riders see things you miss, shout warnings before you've processed them, catch you on a track you haven't ridden before with someone who knows every turn. The Biker Babies ride together because together is faster, safer, and more fun than alone. Find your crew. Ride with them.

The road is yours. Gear up and go.