Every week someone messages asking if a sold-out colorway is "ever coming back." Short answer: usually, yes — but not on a fixed schedule, and not by accident. Here's how restocks actually get decided.

Why sneakers sell out in the first place
We run small, honest batches instead of sitting on a warehouse of every size in every colorway. Popular sizes (US 9–11) and popular colorways (Zebra, Onyx, Bred) move first. That's not a scarcity trick — it's just real demand against a real, finite production run.
How we decide what restocks next
This is the part most stores don't tell you: we don't guess. The vote widget on the homepage and blog is a running poll of real candidates — specific colorways across the 350 V2, Foam RNNR, Slides and 700 lines. Whatever's climbing gets prioritized for the next production batch. It's the closest thing to a direct line between "what people actually want" and "what we go make."
The fastest way to actually get one
- Vote for it. Every vote is a data point for the next batch — it's not symbolic.
- Check back on the collection page for the colorway instead of just the homepage; restocks land there first.
- Don't wait on a size you're unsure of. Read the 350 V2 sizing guide or Foam Runner sizing guide before a drop, not during one — sizes go first.
- Take the 60-second quiz if you're not locked into a specific colorway yet. It'll point you at what's actually in rotation right now instead of what's sold out.
What restocking does not mean
A restock is a new production batch, not a reprint of old stock sitting in a back room. QC and inspection happen the same way on every batch — restocked pairs go through the same 7-day buyer-protection window as a first-run pair.
If a colorway is marked sold out, it's genuinely out — not a scarcity tactic. Vote for it and it has a real shot at the next batch.
See what's currently in stock in the 350 V2 collection and Foam RNNR collection, or go vote on the next drop directly.
