Travis Scott debuts Nike Phantom 6 Cactus Jack football pack
Travis Scott’s Cactus Jack football pack landed as a two-shoe split: a $320 Elite FG cleat and a $200 indoor trainer, both in neon green and brown.

Travis Scott pushed Cactus Jack into football with a two-shoe Nike Phantom 6 pack that landed as both a cleat and an indoor trainer. The split is simple and smart: the Phantom 6 Low Elite FG is the field-ready pair, while the Phantom 6 Low Indoor is the tighter, street-to-gym style meant for indoor surfaces and everyday rotation.
The look carries the whole story. Both pairs arrived in Multi-Color/Metallic Gold, with neon green uppers, brown accents, glossy Reverse Swooshes and yellow laces. Cactus Jack insoles and crooked smiley heel graphics make sure the shoes read like Travis Scott first, football boot second. The pack also came with special drawstring bags, the kind of extra packaging that turns a performance release into something closer to a collector’s object.

Nike priced the Phantom 6 Low Indoor at $200 and the Elite FG at $320, a split that makes the football boot feel like the premium statement and the indoor model the easier entry point. Travis Scott’s official store and Nike SNKRS both treated the release as an official drop, and several SNKRS pages in different markets showed stock moving quickly, with some sizes already sold out. The product pages also framed the shoes as built to Scott’s specifications, not just stamped with his name.
That is the real shift here. Travis Scott has spent years making basketball-court silhouettes and lifestyle sneakers feel desirable; this pack moves him into Nike Football, where the styling still matters but the hardware has to do real work. The Elite FG is built for firm ground, the Indoor uses a GripKnit upper, and the indoor pair pulls from Nike’s Total 90 era, giving the release a sharper football lineage than a typical celebrity colorway.
The timing matters too. Nike tied the release to its broader 2026 World Cup push, and this was widely framed as Scott’s first collaboration with Nike Football. That makes the Phantom 6 pack more than a one-off flex: it is a test case for whether Cactus Jack can keep turning function-heavy sport gear into streetwear objects people actually want to wear. Right now, football looks like a stronger lane than another recycled sneaker drop, because these shoes have a clear role, a clear look and enough attitude to travel beyond the pitch.
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?


