If its real deep powder, I switch over to my US army surplus magnesium snow shoes with a retrofit Iverson binding. Great shoes but the original military bindings were junk. They have great flotation and make a great toboggan track afterwards. I expect the footprint of one of these is about the footprint left by two modern shoes.
I was thinking of those snowshoes when I read this earlier:
He opined that not many manufacturers would be able to build a pair that would survive his abuse which included climbing up trees in snowshoes and jumping off.
I have a few sets of those
snowshoes, and in addition to being magnesium, they have aircraft stainless cable for webbing. My brother used to parachute into WY and MT with them for training in the Army. I have yet to see a pair fail under any conditions. I usually find them in the summer for $5 to $15 a set, at lawn sales of course.
But back to the OP.
Don't get sucked into the snobbish-gear trap, hike your own hike. I never had an issue over many years and at least all of the NH48 peaks with my dump-sourced and home-repaired women's Atlas 1025 snowshoes, pre-televator. They are still sitting on the wall ready for use and I consider them one of the best snowshoes ever made. I actually prefer the women's model (besides that they were free) due to their narrow profile which fits down the packed trails better. The traction was great and I abused them greatly over the years with them suffering little to no damage. My wife since bought me Atlas 1225's (men's this time) and I love them even more. I still own some Tubb's models, including those with the Viper crampon, but they are reserved for packing trails (30") and I find the crampons balls up snow very easily...too easily. The 36" models I have are good for flat terrain only and the other 25" models I just loan to other people (along with the military ones above). Yes, I have a lot of snowshoes. I owned two sets of the Denali's once and just did not like them since they were loud and did not provide great traction or floatation, even with the tails. I think I consigned them at IME and Ragged years ago. I don't miss them.
I bought the wife some Atlas 1227's and she loves them despite not having a lot of time on them last year due to not getting out that much. They will be used a lot this winter.
Hike your own hike and enjoy it. If you want new snowshoes, by all means get them, but not because someone else thinks you should have them.