World Industries Komplettboard Detention ST 6,50
€95.00

World Industries Complete Skateboard Detention ST 6.50
Are you looking for the perfect skating entry for the little ones? The World Industries Complete Skateboard Detention ST 6.50 is specially designed for kids aged 5 years or younger. With a compact width of 6.50 inches and a length of 28.20 inches, this board offers the ideal balance between control and agility, ensuring maximum safety even for small beginners. The 12.25-inch wheelbase also guarantees that kids get a particularly stable stance.
All components of this complete board – from the solidly crafted deck to perfectly matched trucks and wheels – are optimally coordinated. The board comes with griptape pre-installed, so you can start right away. Compared to buying the components individually, this set is significantly cheaper – another great plus especially for families!
- Board size: 6.50 x 28.20 inches
- Recommended for children up to 5 years old
- Wheelbase: 12.25 inches
- Perfectly matched components for easy control
- Soft top deck for additional comfort
- Pre-installed griptape
- Ideal for beginners
- Great value for money as a complete set
Start your skating adventure now and secure the ideal board for young beginners!
| Size: | 6,50 |
|---|---|
| Length: | 28,20 |
| Wheelbase: | 12,25 |

World Industries
World Industries was founded in 1987 in California by Steve Rocco and is widely regarded as the brand that defined 1990s street skateboarding. Rodney Mullen joined as co-owner in 1988 — making World Industries the first major skate brand owned and run by active pro skaters. Marc McKee's iconic characters — Flameboy, Wet Willy and Devil Man — are permanent fixtures in skate pop culture.
Heritage — the brand that put skaters in charge
Steve Rocco was fired by Vision in 1987, took a credit card cash advance and, together with Rodney Mullen, bought out John Lucero's share of his deck operation. That was the start of World Industries. The brand quickly became home to the wildest graphics (courtesy of Marc McKee), the cutting edge of street skating and an irreverent marketing voice that broke every rule of the era. Rocco also backed the spin-offs Blind (with Mark Gonzales), Plan B (with Mike Ternasky) and 101 (with Natas Kaupas). World was sold to Globe International in 2002 for US$46 million — Rocco and Mullen both became instant multimillionaires.
Which World Industries products fit which skater?
The current catalog mixes reissued classic pro graphics with evergreen everyday hardware.
- World Industries Decks — classic popsicle shapes from 7.75 to 10.0 inch, 7-ply maple. Current graphics: Mullen "Rock Is King", Klein "Black Eye Kid", Campbell "Fudgesicle", "Skateboarding Is Dead", "Skateboard University". Solid deck for street and cruiser setups.
- Wet Willy / Flameboy hardware — griptape (Wet Willy Blue), bearings (Flameboy ABEC 7, Wet Willy ABEC 5), mounting sets (1.25" Allen/Philip). Classic World characters on everyday hardware.
- Pop items — air fresheners (Rocco), stickers, apparel. For riders who want the World Industries logo on more than just the bottom of their board.
Team heritage — the roster that shaped the 90s
Mike Vallely rode for World from 1989 to 1991 and released one of the first modern double-kick decks — a direct precursor to today's popsicle stick. The wider 90s team included Chico Brenes, Daniel Castillo, Spencer Fujimoto, Shiloh Greathouse, Daewon Song, Jovontae Turner and Jed. Rodney Mullen stayed the face of the brand with his pro decks. No other roster left a comparable mark on 90s street skating.
FAQ
Who founded World Industries?
Steve Rocco founded World Industries in 1987. Rodney Mullen joined as co-owner in 1988 — making World the first major skate brand owned by working pro skaters.
Who designed the Flameboy and Wet Willy graphics?
Marc McKee, World Industries' in-house artist. He also created Devil Man. The three characters became enduring skate pop-culture icons.
Does Steve Rocco still own World Industries?
No. World Industries was sold to Globe International in 2002 for US$46 million. Globe has owned the brand ever since.
Are World Industries decks still good today?
Yes — standard 7-ply maple construction in modern popsicle shapes. Daily-beater quality. Pairs well with Independent trucks and Spitfire wheels. Beginners should start with a complete board.
What brands grew out of World Industries?
Blind (Mark Gonzales), Plan B (Mike Ternasky), 101 (Natas Kaupas), Chocolate and Girl (linked through the Crailtap network). Almost later emerged from the same Daewon-Song-extended family.
How fast does World Industries ship?
Everything ships from our Giessen warehouse in 1–2 business days. Drop us a line if you need help with deck size or setup.

