I've found that Mountain Safety Research tends to arrive at an impressive iteration of a product and then stick with it. Most outdoor gear companies tend to gradually ruin their best products with incessant cost-cutting and penny-pinching, but they should take a page from MSR's book.
That said, when you refresh your products, it's a good idea to look at what your peers are doing. MSR's Hubba Hubba NX backpacking tent, which was redesigned for 2022, could've used a few more minor changes to keep it from feeling outclassed by its increasingly strong competition.
The Hubba Hubba NX is available in one-, two-, and three-person versions. I tested the two-person version and took it out for a week of hiking in Texas' Big Bend National Park, from chilly forested mountains to 95-degree desert hikes.
MSR cut 10 ounces—a significant amount of weight—off the two-person, pre-2022 Hubba Hubba NX. It now weighs only 3 ounces more than the Big Agnes Copper Spur UL2 and is 6.5 ounces lighter than the Sea to Summit Telos TR2. MSR did this without reducing its 29 square feet of floor space inside, and new poles make the walls stand more vertically, making it feel roomier. The Copper Spur measures the same, and the Telos is nearly the same, at 28 square feet.
Freestanding tents don't need to be staked out to set up fully, and they tend to withstand high winds better than non-freestanding or semi-freestanding (which only require a few stakes). That came in handy in the desert, where at times the concrete-like desert floor wouldn't let me drive even a titanium nail peg into the earth. For high winds, I'd pull each guyline out and drop a heavy rock on it, but on calmer nights I just threw my gear in the tent to weigh it down and went to sleep.
Some strong gusts battered the Hubba Hubba NX around in the open desert at night, as the cool breezes rolled down the Chisos Mountains at dusk and sent a chill over the desert floor where I made camp most nights. I wasn't able to find out the wind speed—to my extreme delight, there was no cell signal on the Dodson Trail—but the tent held solidly with barely a ripple all night long.


