Hey Jeff
The 10'2 Wedge is incredibly stable.
I'm also 94 kgs and have absolutely zero issues with stability.
Don't worry at all about the rocker - as it's really only the nose that has an exaggerated rocker (Aladdin's boot).
I'm based in Darwin, so our waves are often very feeble, messy and gutless. But, we do get days where the stars align and score quality waves.
So I look for boards that have good glide qualities and that I can still get a few carves / turns on. I also need boards that are stable in strong winds and sub-cyclonic conditions - which is when we tend to get the best swells.
When you're standing out the back in a howling westerly trying to pick off a few big ones, you need a board that's stable and gives you confidence that you're gonna catch the waves you're paddling into.
The Wedge has been a revelation. I think of the 10'2 Wedge as shortboard performance with longboard benefits - stability, glide and manoeuvrability. It's by no means a 'longboard' in the traditional sense though - there's no parallel rails on the Wedge.
The Wedge has slightly stepped rails, so it sits 'in' the water not on it. There's nothing corky about it.
It surfs a lot shorter than its length suggests and is a comfortable board when paddling out to the line-up or on flat water in general. You can easily take the 10'2 Wedge for a cruisy paddle on the flat stuff for a bit of a zen-bliss-out sesh. Which I'm incredibly partial of doing also.

The 10'2 Wedge has its wide-point further toward the nose. From there the rails draw back into a rounded/area-type pin tail. The shape means it's incredibly easy to turn from the centre and the tail.
It's also super fast. I paddled into a ripper a few weeks back from out the back and managed to work it into the shorey which then kinda stood up for me and the Wedge just accelerated - I paddled in after that one totally psyched.
The other thing I would say about the Wedge is that, without a shadow of a doubt it will improve your surfing. Hundred per cent. I've surfed on and off pretty much since I was in my teens, and go alright, and I have to say the Wedge gives me the confidence to throw the tail just that bit further and you pretty much know that you'll be able to bring it back round without losing control.
Lastly, the construction is sick. It's such a beautiful board to look at and is really solid and totally uncompromising. It's the first Starboard I've owned and I'm incredibly impressed with it.
What sort of waves are you getting into Jeff? Are you getting into beachies, points, reefs? Are you highly experienced or just starting to get into the waves? My view is that, if I can get a board to glide in to waves with the conditions that I get up here no worries, then, for most crew on the east coast of Oz, you're not gonna have any issues at all. Just remember, even though it's 10'2, it's not a 'longboard', as such, so if you're after something that totally glides above all else with lovely parallel rails, then definitely check out more traditional log-style boards (of which there's heaps of options around).
But if you're after something that's gonna get you in to waves no worries and give you a pretty high degree of performance in a (longer) board and is plenty stable enough, then the Wedge won't disappoint by a very long margin.
Hope this helps man!
Cheers and let us know how you go!
MD