Royal Enfield just unleashed the meanest-looking Himalayan yet – the Mana Black Edition – and it’s priced at ₹3.37 lakh (ex-showroom). This isn’t some half-hearted sticker job; the bike is drenched head-to-toe in a sinister matte black finish that makes it look like it rolled straight out of a war zone. The name itself comes from Mana Pass – that brutal, oxygen-starved border stretch sitting above 5,600 metres where India meets China. Up there, everything tries to kill you: freezing cold, razor-thin air, and rocks that laugh at normal bikes. This special edition is built to channel exactly that unforgiving vibe.
Looks That Could Scare Small Children
Forget shiny paint and chrome bling. Every single panel, the frame, even the engine casing – everything is murdered-out in deep matte black. It’s the kind of stealth finish that makes the bike disappear against a mountain at night. No colourful graphics, no flashy decals – just pure aggression on two wheels. Royal Enfield didn’t stop at paint either; they slapped on proper adventure gear right from the factory so you can hammer it straight into the dirt without adding a single aftermarket bolt.
Same Proven Heart, Zero Compromises
Under the blackout skin beats the exact same Sherpa 452 motor that’s already winning hearts. The 452 cc liquid-cooled single still pumps out a healthy 39.5 horsepower and a meaty 40 Nm of torque, with ride-by-wire throttle and a slick six-speed box. Low and mid-range grunt is ridiculous – perfect for crawling up loose gravel climbs or blasting past trucks on broken highway patches.
Built to Eat Mountains for Breakfast
The backbone is Royal Enfield’s tough steel twin-spar frame, paired with proper long-travel suspension: 43 mm upside-down forks up front and a linkage monoshock at the rear – both giving you a full 200 mm of travel to soak up the worst rocks and ruts. Ground clearance sits at a confident 230 mm, seat height is 860 mm (with adjustable options), and the 1,510 mm wheelbase keeps everything stable when the going gets wild.
Factory-Fitted Off-Road Armour
This is where the Mana Black really flexes:
- Blacked-out rally handguards that actually protect your levers
- Tall rally windscreen to punch through freezing wind
- Proper dual-height rally seat that’s comfier on long hauls
- Raised front mudguard to keep mud out of your face
- Tubeless spoked wheels (21-inch front, 17-inch rear) ready for proper dual-sport rubber
Brakes are serious too – 320 mm front disc, 270 mm rear, with switchable dual-channel ABS so you can lock the rear when you want to slide like a pro.
Modern Tech That Doesn’t Suck
You still get the brilliant round 4-inch TFT screen with full Google Maps navigation, multiple ride modes, Bluetooth phone pairing, music controls, and a USB-C port to keep your devices alive in the middle of nowhere. Full LED lighting all around – that iconic round headlight now looks even more menacing in black.
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Verdict: If You Want to Look Like a Badass and Actually Ride Like One
At ₹3.37 lakh, the Himalayan Mana Black Edition is for riders who are done with pretty bikes that can’t handle real adventures. It’s factory-ready for Ladakh trips, Spiti loops, or just disappearing into the hills looking like you own the place. No need to spend extra on black paint or protection kits – Royal Enfield has already done the job.
If black is your colour and rough trails are your playground, this is the Himalayan you’ve been waiting for. Go book one before they’re gone – because bikes this evil never stay on showroom floors for long.









