Travis Scott and Nike drop World Cup-themed Total 90 streetwear capsule
Travis Scott and Nike revived Total 90 with a 50-piece World Cup capsule for 10 nations, turning football nostalgia into streetwear armor.

Travis Scott and Nike have turned one of football’s most recognizable design codes into a 50-piece streetwear proposition, tying the Total 90 revival to 10 World Cup nations and selling it as a global uniform with club-level swagger. The capsule went live on June 11, 2026, and its football-first mix of jerseys, hoodies, track jackets, caps, T-shirts and accessories pushes well beyond a standard celebrity collab.
That is what makes the drop feel bigger than merch. Built around Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Croatia, England, France, South Korea, the Netherlands, Portugal and the United States, the collection uses national identity as a graphic system, the kind of shorthand that reads immediately on a pitch, in a city, or on a feed. Reports said the line was sold exclusively through Travis Scott’s online store, a move that kept the rollout tightly controlled and reinforced the scarcity logic that has become part of the Cactus Jack formula.

The product story had been building in public. Earlier teases showed a brown Cactus Jack Total 90 jersey and a green Nike Phantom 6 Low, while the wider Travis Scott x Nike soccer push had already introduced a bright green Phantom 6 cleat and indoor soccer shoes. Those previews mattered because they signaled the direction early: this was never going to be a pure retro exercise. Instead, it folded Nike football hardware and archive references into the language Scott’s audience understands best, distressed surfaces, bold color blocking and pieces that look as ready for the street as for a stadium tunnel.
The Total 90 name carries real weight inside Nike’s football history. The line began in 2000 and expanded through the early and mid-2000s, when Nike used it to anchor some of its biggest World Cup-era imagery. The 2002 Secret Tournament, also known as The Cage, featured 24 players and Eric Cantona as referee, a campaign that helped define Total 90 as more than a boot line or jersey concept. That legacy is exactly what Scott and Nike are mining here: the emotional charge of a football era that still lives in memory, reworked into a product drop that can travel far beyond the sport.
The result is a capsule that sits in a productive tension between authenticity and hype. It leans hard on football heritage, but it is packaged for a culture that treats archive references as currency. In that balance, the Total 90 revival looks less like a nostalgia play than a bid to turn World Cup symbolism into a marketable streetwear uniform.
This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.
Did this article answer your question?

