Nike x Cactus Jack Total 90 drops as World Cup surges

Nike x – Nike has finally released the long-awaited Cactus Jack x Nike Total 90 collection, timed with World Cup momentum and built around a Y2K revival. The drop includes country-specific football jerseys for Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Croatia, England, France, Kor
By the time the World Cup crowd reaches full volume, Nike is already turning cultural noise into something you can wear.
The Cactus Jack x Nike Total 90 collection is finally here in full. following earlier teases in Nike’s Rip the Script campaign and the appearance of a special edition Phantom 6 low on Erling Haaland this week. For Travis Scott. this is the latest step in his Nike partnership—one that has been building for a while. now landing all at once.
The timing matters because the collection is built like a tournament companion. Nike’s football jerseys are presented as tied to what’s happening on the pitch: if a nation is still in the running. there’s a chance to get its kit. but once that team is eliminated. the collection for that nation is effectively gone.
What Nike and Scott have put on shelves leans hard into the early-2000s. and the Total 90 name carries that weight. The line is framed as a full-on Y2K revival, with familiar silhouettes reimagined through Travis Scott’s lens. The result isn’t positioned as traditional teamwear built around club badges or federation loyalty. Instead, it’s treated like free-form expression—global football identity, reworked into a distinct Cactus Jack universe.
The standout details come through in the country-specific graphics. Ten nations are highlighted: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Croatia, England, France, Korea, the Netherlands, Portugal, and the USA. Each piece includes subtle nods to its respective culture, while still staying unmistakably inside the Total 90 and Cactus Jack look.
The lineup goes beyond jerseys. Football shirts lead the charge, backed by a broader streetwear set: graphic tees, heavyweight hoodies, caps, and matching track jackets. One of the pieces is described through the lens of the sport itself—Messi and the Argentina team from the last World Cup are referenced as part of the collection’s football pull.
Style is where the collection lingers. It leans into early-2000s performance aesthetics with bold panels and nostalgic cuts, while adding modern detailing and Scott’s signature off-kilter edge. In other words, it keeps the DNA of Total 90 while aiming the look at the present.
For Nike, it’s another win in a marketing playbook that has clearly been in overdrive during the World Cup. With Scott at the center and the tournament energy peaking. the drop reads like it was designed to move at the same speed as the matches—global. nostalgic. and built around the idea that when Nike and Travis Scott link up. it’s never just about the product. It’s about the culture around it, and the moment it arrives in.
Nike Cactus Jack Travis Scott Total 90 World Cup Nike Rip the Script Phantom 6 low Erling Haaland Y2K football jerseys