Chris Sharma takes on “Novena enmienda” (9a+) in the steep, iconic Santa Linya cave in Spain—one of the world’s most famous arenas for power-endurance sport climbing. In this short clip from worklessclimbmore, you’ll see Sharma repeating the route originally opened by Dani Andrada, capturing a moment from the era when 9a+ was still rare air and every send felt like a statement.
Worth watching for its raw, no-frills intensity, the video distills the essentials of elite climbing into 38 seconds: precision on vicious terrain, total commitment above the rope, and that unmistakable calm that separates the best from the rest. Whether you’re here for Sharma, for Santa Linya’s overhanging theater, or simply for a quick hit of motivation, it’s a compact reminder of why hard routes—and the people who chase them—keep pulling us back.
Wheel of Life (V16) follows Chris Webb-Parsons on a rare, early-era look at cutting-edge bouldering as he takes on the second ascent of Dai Koyamada’s infamous testpiece in the Hollow Mountain Cave of Australia’s Grampians. In just under six minutes, the film drops you straight into the cave’s steep, shadowed world—where every body position, micro-adjustment, and breath matters on one of the hardest problems of its time.
What makes this worth watching is the purity of it: no excess, just raw movement and total commitment on a climb that demands precision, power, and composure when everything is screaming to peel you off. You’ll get a front-row seat to the pace and intensity of a V16 attempt—how a climber builds confidence on razor-thin margins, fights for control through the crux, and turns a mythic line into something tangible.
Jade drops you into a short, high-intensity session with Daniel Woods as he works out the first ascent of an old Dave Graham project in the wild granite of Rocky Mountain National Park. Centered on the boulder problem “Jade” (V15), the film captures the focus, patience, and precision it takes to turn a long-standing idea into a real line.
What makes it worth watching is the way it distills cutting-edge bouldering into a few gripping minutes: subtle body positions, razor-thin margins, and the calm commitment behind every attempt. Whether you’re chasing your own projects or just love seeing climbing at its absolute limit, Jade delivers that rare mix of power, problem-solving, and raw mountain atmosphere that stays with you after the final top-out.
Chris Sharma turns a quiet session into a full-on statement in Escalada / climb - Dream time “v15”, taking on the legendary boulder problem Dreamtime in Cresciano. In under three minutes, you get a raw, close-up look at the focus, precision, and power it takes to commit to one of the most iconic hard lines ever climbed, captured in a simple, no-frills clip from Rafael Silva’s channel.
This is worth watching for the purity of it: no distractions, just movement, tension, and the moment everything either clicks or slips. Whether you’re a boulderer chasing your next breakthrough or a fan who loves seeing climbing history in its most direct form, Sharma’s attempt on Dreamtime delivers that unmistakable mix of effort and elegance that keeps you replaying “just one more time.”
Chris Sharma - Dreamcatcher 5.14d drops you into Squamish as one of climbing’s most iconic athletes takes on his first ascent of Dreamcatcher, a cutting-edge 5.14d/9a. In just over six minutes, this Dosage Volume 4 excerpt captures the focus, movement, and nerve it takes to commit to a line that sits right at the edge of what’s possible.
What makes this worth watching is the pure, distilled intensity: crisp sequences, real attempts, and the kind of quiet determination that defines top-end sport climbing. Whether you’re chasing your next project or just love seeing mastery on stone, this is a short hit of inspiration that reminds you why hard routes matter—and why the process behind them is as gripping as the send.
Dreamtime by Nalle Hukkataival drops you into the humid forests of Cresciano as Nalle takes on one of bouldering’s most famous lines. In just under three minutes, this classic clip captures his first Finnish ascent of the iconic Dreamtime problem—an achievement that helped cement the climb’s place in modern bouldering history.
Worth watching for its raw, no-frills focus and pure movement, Dreamtime is all about tension, precision, and keeping it together when the holds feel impossibly small. It’s a quick hit of inspiration: the kind of sequence that makes you want to brush your projects, dial the footwork, and come back for one more try—because sometimes the difference between “almost” and “sent” is simply believing the next move will stick.