confused confused

Dont know if ive posted in the right section,
Im looking to buy a a new bike around £7-800
i was looking at cube nature pro 2012 as it had a lock out feature for the forks main use will be short commutes, cycle track on weekends or trail riding. Unfortunatley the 2013 version no longer has the remote lock out on the handlebar but ive noticed a cube ltd pro 29 which is i assume a mountain bike/ hard tail would this bike be suitable for long road journeys ?
Im looking to buy a a new bike around £7-800
i was looking at cube nature pro 2012 as it had a lock out feature for the forks main use will be short commutes, cycle track on weekends or trail riding. Unfortunatley the 2013 version no longer has the remote lock out on the handlebar but ive noticed a cube ltd pro 29 which is i assume a mountain bike/ hard tail would this bike be suitable for long road journeys ?
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Basically a few years ago people started to experiment with larger wheels which roll over terrain better than smaller wheels. So generally these days you have 26 & 29 in wheel size with a few other options starting to become more popular one of these being 650.
Without wanting to start all out war (as people are pretty resolute in their defence of their chosen wheel size) think generally people agree that 29'rs roll better due to the increased size but can be more of a handful in the tight twisty single track world.
There is no secret ingredient - Kung Fu Panda
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Parktools
As for 26 Vrs 29 well thats down to you as the rider, your style and where you ride. I've been fortunate to ride & race both (not that specific bike but wheel size) and they act differently.
Would suggest that you get on both & try them out to see which you like/prefer in terms of handling, cornering, acceleration, braking, climbing & descending.
For short commutes I'd get a mountain bike as it's more fun on weekends. Hybrids are a bit rubbish in my opinion.
For long road journeys I'd get a road bike.
But your post is contradictory. Is it short commutes or long road journeys?
There is no secret ingredient - Kung Fu Panda
London Calling on Facebook
Parktools
There is no secret ingredient - Kung Fu Panda
London Calling on Facebook
Parktools
voodoo hoodoo
Having said that, if you put lots of road miles in then an MTB can get old really quickly, even with slicks - so get a road bike.
If you do actually have a 'short commute' and want to ride trails them the MTB is definitely the way to go. If you also want to ride Lands End to John O'Groats on it then you are frankly asking a bit much. Yes you can do it in the same way I can enter a 1.4 Clio in a track race day - it will finish but it will be slow, hard work and most will ask why I did it.
Buy the MTB for fun / short commute and borrow/hire a road bike for marathon road efforts...
I use a road orientated hybrid for commuting as I prefer the extra control from flat bars, but it's on skinny wheels and the bars are well below saddle height, I also use the centre of the bars for a lower tighter stance at speed.
retired 9.6kg Carrera Kraken
The Carrera Hardtail combined thread - come on all you Carrera's!
The Sons Scott Genius RC20 build