An intermediate climber projecting V4-V6 boulders or 5.10-5.11 routes has outgrown the comfortable beginner setup. The upgrades that matter now are about performance and training: a downturned shoe that grips steep terrain, an assisted-braking belay device for long projecting sessions, a hangboard and a real program to build finger strength, and — if they’re heading outside — the rope, draws, and pad that open up sport climbing and bouldering. Every pick is stocked at Austin’s Crux Climbing Center and cross-referenced against r/climbharder and OutdoorGearLab.
How we pick these gifts
- Climbing specialty retail first: Every pick is stocked at Crux Climbing Center, Whole Earth Provision Co., Austin Bouldering Project, or REI.
- Community + editorial consensus: Cross-referenced against r/climbing, r/bouldering, r/climbharder, OutdoorGearLab, and Climbing.com.
- Performance and training, not basics: Aggressive shoes, assisted braking, structured finger training, and outdoor sport gear.
- Budget range: $19 to $400 — from liquid chalk to a highball crash pad.
The Performance Shoe and Belay Upgrade
The two defining intermediate upgrades: a downturned shoe for steep projecting, and an assisted-braking device for long sessions and outdoor sport.
La Sportiva Solution
The aggressive downturn and P3 rand make the Solution the canonical step-up shoe for an intermediate projecting V4-V6 on steep terrain. Crux Climbing Center carries the full La Sportiva line, and the Solution is one of the most recurrently recommended performance shoes in r/bouldering step-up threads.
- Downturned, asymmetric last excels on overhangs and toe-hooks
- Vibram XS Grip2 rubber is sticky enough to forgive imperfect footwork while training
- Aggressive shape is uncomfortable for long multi-pitch or all-day sessions
- Premium price; sizing runs tricky — in-store fitting at Crux is strongly advised
Petzl GriGri (2019)
An assisted-braking device is the single highest-value safety upgrade for an intermediate moving into longer projecting sessions and outdoor sport. The 2019 GriGri handles a wide 8.5-11mm rope range, and it’s OutdoorGearLab’s Editors’ Choice and the default belay-device recommendation across r/climbing.
- Cam-assisted blocking dramatically reduces fatigue during repeated hangdogging
- Smooth lever-controlled lowering and broad rope-diameter compatibility
- Single-rope only (no double-rope rappels)
- Requires proper technique training; assisted is not automatic-locking
Train to Improve: Hangboard + Program
Intentional finger-strength training is the defining intermediate move. A hangboard is only as good as the program behind it — buy them together.
Trango Rock Prodigy Training Center Hangboard
The Rock Prodigy’s two independently-mountable halves let climbers match width to their shoulders to protect elbows and shoulders. It pairs directly with the Rock Climber’s Training Manual program and is a recurring r/climbharder pick.
- Adjustable spacing reduces shoulder/elbow strain versus fixed one-piece boards
- Ergonomic pockets and edges designed around a structured periodized program
- Two-piece mounting is more involved to install
- Plastic is less skin-friendly than premium wood boards
The Rock Climber’s Training Manual
The book that turns a hangboard from a toy into a program. Its periodized ‘Rock Prodigy’ method includes explicit beginner, intermediate, and advanced schedules, matching a climber training 2-4x/week. The single most-cited training text on r/climbharder.
- Concrete periodized schedules for sport, bouldering, and trad rather than vague advice
- Over 200 illustrations and protocols that pair one-to-one with the Rock Prodigy hangboard
- Dense and engineering-heavy; some find the volume intimidating
- Assumes access to a hangboard and disciplined scheduling
Going Outside: Pad, Draws, and Rope
The gear that opens up outdoor bouldering and sport climbing for an intermediate ready to leave the gym.
Black Diamond Mondo Crash Pad
For an intermediate starting outdoor bouldering, the Mondo offers a massive 44x65in / 5in-thick landing zone that inspires confidence on V4-V6 highballs. The recurring ‘biggest landing for the money’ editorial pick across OutdoorGearLab and 99Boulders.
- Among the thickest (5in) and largest single pads available for highball confidence
- Shoulder-carry handles make the oversized pad manageable on the approach
- Bulky and heavy; overkill for short approaches or gym-only climbers
- High price and large storage footprint
Black Diamond HotForge Quickdraw 6-Pack
A first set of quickdraws is the gateway to leading outdoor sport, and the HotForge 6-pack is the standard entry point with keylock top carabiners that won’t snag on bolt hangers. A frequent value recommendation in r/climbing first-rack threads.
- Keylock noses clip and unclip smoothly without snagging on hangers
- Bent-gate rope-end carabiner speeds clipping mid-route at an accessible price
- Heavier than premium draws; six is a starter count most sport routes will supplement
- Solid-gate is slightly heavier than wiregate
Mammut 9.5 Crag Classic Rope (60m)
A durable 9.5mm single rope is the right first outdoor sport rope — it survives the repeated falls and lowering of projecting better than thin race-day cords. OutdoorGearLab names the 9.5 Crag Classic the best all-around versatile rope.
- 9.5mm strikes the durability-vs-handling sweet spot for a workhorse projecting rope
- Supple, smooth-feeding handling that pairs well with the GriGri
- Heavier than sub-9.2mm performance ropes for redpoint attempts
- Confirm exact length and dry-treatment before buying — rope listings vary
The High-Frequency Upgrade
The cheap consumable an intermediate actually notices on long projecting burns.
FrictionLabs Secret Stuff Liquid Chalk
Liquid chalk is the low-cost, high-frequency upgrade an intermediate notices: it lasts longer between re-chalks during long projecting burns and keeps the gym mess down. FrictionLabs is the most-named premium chalk brand in r/climbing.
- Long-lasting base layer reduces mid-route re-chalking on sustained burns
- Less airborne dust than loose chalk, welcomed at many gyms
- More expensive per use than loose chalk
- Alcohol base can be drying on already-cracked skin
What to skip
Skip a hangboard for anyone with a current finger or pulley injury — wait until they’re healed. Skip a hangboard without the program to go with it; the board alone gets misused. Skip an aggressive shoe for a slab-focused climber. And double-check rope length, diameter, and dry-treatment before buying — rope listings vary and the wrong spec is an expensive miss.
The intermediate climber improves fastest by training intentionally and getting on steeper terrain. If you buy one gift, the GriGri or the hangboard-plus-manual combo delivers the most lasting value. For the climber heading outside, the quickdraws and rope together open up sport leading for under $250 — and a downturned shoe is the upgrade they’ll feel on the very first overhang.








