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Bluegame’s Foiling Yacht: The Quiet Revolution Under the Hull

Foiling Yachts

The rise of foiling boats marks one of the most exciting shifts in marine design — yet not all concepts will survive the turbulent journey from prototype to production.

While pioneers like Candela have defined the conversation around electric hydrofoils, a new generation of builders is exploring different design philosophies — combining lift, efficiency, and seakeeping in more versatile ways. One standout is the Bluegame BGF45, the first production model in the yard’s new foil-assisted multihull range.

Rather than relying on full hydrofoiling lift, the BGF45 uses partial foil assistance to reduce drag, improve comfort, and extend range — particularly valuable for longer passages or rougher conditions. It’s a more pragmatic evolution, designed for real-world cruising rather than flat-water performance.

The BGF line represents a shift toward integrated design thinking, where naval architecture, hydrodynamics, and advanced materials are developed in-house alongside propulsion and control systems. That kind of coordination requires serious investment and engineering depth — precisely why only brands with strong corporate backing and technical partnerships are likely to endure.

For now, the market for such craft remains selective: a handful of private owners, chase-boat buyers, and forward-thinking innovators who value technology and comfort in equal measure. But as infrastructure improves and consumer confidence in foiling grows, the segment could expand quickly — much as hybrid power did a decade ago.

The message is clear: the next phase of foiling will belong not to the boldest experiments, but to the builders who can industrialise innovation. With projects like the BGF45, Bluegame may just prove that the future of fast, efficient cruising doesn’t have to leave practicality behind.