the truth is, wood is wood. my wood was stabilized and it's a pretty good block but still, where it broke each time is at thin areas, don't think that another wood would be so much better tbh, the dibi is not good to drop and abuse, it's minimalist in form and sleek and thin but it is wood and that area where yours broke is not going to survive a good fall landing right on the toe, any wood could have broke so don't beat yourself up too much about the wood you chose bro, just find those pieces![]()
I was gonna say something anyway, but now I'll start with this: I totally disagree with t-cad on this. There's an immense difference in strength of wood used. I can tell a LOT when I'm working with it.
Now, what I was gonna say . . . when someone asks me what I think about a particular piece, and I express some concerns. . . I'm not just casually blathering. When the reply I get is, "yeah, but . . ", then I try to accommodate. So, if one asks me that, and my response is anything other than " yes, that will be good material " . . . . . then from that point on, one is asking to take a risk. I don't mind risk, but . . . just sayin'
I built another from regular ole home depot oak a while ago and dropped it a bunch of times no cracks, even dropped it a few times on purpose to test after I cracked the snakewood and nope, it just bounces, I guess some woods may be softer but softness means it absorbs shock where really hard can mean really brittle? don't know for sure, peters the wood guru here but I think any wood should be treated as fragile I guess, it's just wood 
until you squonk the glue in the atty by mistake
i kid i kid
love my kids but their wake is vast