Industry

MAAP x P.A.M. Drop PAAM IV Outer Terrestrial Collection Available Worldwide

MAAP and P.A.M. have launched PAAM IV: Outer Terrestrial, a fourth capsule that pairs a toxic Glow Lime Wind Jacket with Violet Cosmos Pro Air Jersey 3.0 — available worldwide since Feb 17, 2026.

Mia Chen3 min read
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MAAP x P.A.M. Drop PAAM IV Outer Terrestrial Collection Available Worldwide
Source: hypebeast.com

MAAP and Perks And Mini returned for a fourth run with PAAM IV: Outer Terrestrial, a cycling-meets-psychedelia capsule that dropped on February 17, 2026 and is available online at MAAP and P.A.M., in P.A.M. stores in Melbourne and Sydney, and through stockists such as Enroute.cc. Hypebeast summed it up bluntly: the collection is available worldwide now, and the work feels like a deliberate bridge between high-performance kit and P.A.M.’s graphic-heavy wardrobe.

This is not the duo’s first orbit. MAAP and P.A.M. first collaborated in 2021, followed by a more casual collection in early 2022 and the trippy Club Ciclistico Amatiorale capsule later that year, a track record BikeRadar cites as proof that PAAM IV is an evolution rather than a one-off stunt. The new collection leans into that lineage with signature language — “psy-activated graphic language” and a “free-wheeling aesthetic” — applied to MAAP’s technical archetypes.

Perksandmini’s own copy reads like a field report from another planet: “Is there anybody out here? Moving before the break of dawn, holding until after dark. ... At first light, the Pro Air Jersey 3.0 breathes air, as Violet Cosmos flickers against Black and Glow Lime.” Those lines map directly onto the kit: the Pro Air Jersey 3.0 arrives in Violet Cosmos and Black/Glow Lime treatments, the Air Mesh LS Tee is presented as a ventilated second skin for “interstellar heat,” and the Team Bib Evo Cargo is billed to “free the body from orbit,” carrying tools for long-range travel.

New-to-MAAP product architecture arrives too. Hypebeast highlights a Wind Jacket rendered in a toxic Glow Lime intended to “shield riders from atmospheric interference.” BikeRadar notes reflective MAAP x P.A.M. graphics on the Team Bib Evo Cargo shorts, while accessory play includes caps, socks, bottles, and musettes — the small instruments P.A.M. says orbit the collection.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Retail pricing appears on Enroute.cc but with conflicting snippets. One Enroute block lists the Pro Air Jersey 3.0 at CA$295, Team Bib Evo Cargo at CA$435, Team Sock at CA$35, Tee at CA$115, 5 Panel Nylon Cap at CA$65, and Bottle Large at CA$40. Another Enroute snippet anomalously shows CA$50 for a Women’s Pro Air Jersey 3.0 and an unexplained CA$360 line; that inconsistency should be noted by buyers. P.A.M.’s site also lists shipping and returns terms: free shipping in Australia for orders over AUD $150 and worldwide over AUD $450, “No refunds on discounted items,” and “Customer pays import taxes and duties,” with a specific note that U.S. customers are aware of tariffs.

Visually, PAAM IV plays the palette hard — Violet Cosmos, Black, and that toxic Glow Lime — with functional silhouettes: ventilated jerseys, cargo bibs, protective wind jackets, and off-bike hoodies and shorts. Photographs circulating with the release show models in the Pro Air Jersey 3.0, long-sleeve tees, and the Glow Lime jacket, translating P.A.M.’s psychedelic motifs onto MAAP’s cycling templates.

PAAM IV lands as a purposeful hybrid: technical cycling garments priced and presented for both on-bike performance and off-bike streetwear impact, available worldwide through MAAP, P.A.M., P.A.M. stores in Melbourne and Sydney, and third-party retailers such as Enroute.

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