adidas x SATISFY: More Than a Collaboration, a True Cultural Revolution in Running?
Out in the Arizona desert, somewhere in the dusty landscapes of Oro Valley, a dense crowd loops endlessly around a pump track. No athletics track. No stopwatch. No starting arch. Instead: live hardcore music, tight corners, runners brushing shoulders and an atmosphere that feels more like a Hellfest festival than a traditional race. Welcome to The Circle Pit, the launch event for the collaboration between two running brands from completely opposite worlds. After weeks of teasing, adidas and SATISFY officially unveiled their partnership last weekend with the release of a SATISFY-inspired version of the Adios Pro 4. Marathons.com takes a closer look at this spectacular event that got everyone talking.
| A unique collaboration between two opposite worlds
On paper, adidas announced a multi-season partnership with SATISFY, the Paris-based brand that has become one of the most unique players in the running industry over the last few years. Technical yet fashionable. Ultra premium yet rebellious. Running-focused yet almost anti-running in its philosophy. Because let’s be honest: while today’s brands constantly innovate when it comes to shoes, most running apparel collections all look the same and rarely feel truly creative. SATISFY chose another direction: ultra-technical clothing that also carries attitude and identity. A brand built around aesthetics and counterculture.
Founded in 2015 by Brice Partouche, an amateur trail runner from the fashion world, the brand draws inspiration from skateboarding, punk culture, underground music and a certain idea of freedom through movement. With a very premium price positioning justified by material quality and product design, SATISFY has built an extremely loyal community, especially in trail, ultra and lifestyle circles. Almost like a niche subculture. And that’s probably what makes this collaboration interesting: adidas is not SATISFY. On one side, you have a niche underground brand with a powerful image and high-end apparel. On the other, a global sportswear giant specializing in high-performance footwear worth tens of billions of euros. On paper, the two worlds almost seem incompatible. And yet, this collaboration was highly anticipated by many running enthusiasts.
| The Circle Pit: a race inspired by hardcore concerts
To present the partnership, adidas gave SATISFY complete creative freedom. The result: The Circle Pit, a concept inspired by the crowd movements seen at punk and hardcore concerts. SATISFY invited influencers and key figures from the running scene, including the Parisian running store Distance. Several teams rotated in relay format around a closed pump track with no real straightaways and no structured rhythm. The goal was not to chase records or highlight pure performance. The objective was elsewhere: create an experience. Break codes. Destroy barriers.
Watching the videos released after the event, one thing is impossible to deny: visually, it was incredibly powerful. The crowd dressed in black bandanas, the SATISFY aesthetic, the light projections, live music from bands like One Step Closer and Upchuck, and the almost post-apocalyptic desert scenery made everything feel more like the launch of a streetwear collection or a music festival than a traditional running activation. We had never really seen a running marketing campaign like this before. And naturally, the internet reacted immediately.
“Through our partnership, adidas and SATISFY aim to elevate the intersection of performance, innovation, culture, and community to move running forward in an authentic way. Together, we are creating a new aesthetic language for running – one that allows runners to express identity and individuality while remaining rooted in elite performance. Running culture is evolving, and we believe the creative tension between our two perspectives can inspire new ways of experiencing the sport.”
Stephan Scholten, VP of Product at Adidas
| Brilliant for some, completely contradictory for others
Within hours, two camps emerged. On one side, SATISFY fans described the event as extraordinary. An experience capable of bringing something fresh into a running world sometimes criticized for being too standardized or overly serious. A way to inject emotion, energy and a form of creative chaos back into a sport often obsessed with numbers and performance standards.
On the other side, critics pointed toward a deeper contradiction. The criticism wasn’t even really about the shoe itself. It mostly focused on the use of aesthetics and codes borrowed from historically anti-commercial or anti-establishment cultures in order to build a marketing campaign for a publicly traded multinational company. Punk visuals, underground imagery and rebellious references… now repackaged by one of the biggest sportswear corporations in the world. The criticism is not new. For decades, major brands have collaborated with smaller labels to absorb the codes of subcultures. Skateboarding, hip-hop, trail running and even certain community-driven running movements have all gone through this process.
| An Adios Pro 4 redesigned the SATISFY way
But let’s get back to the real heart of the matter: the shoe. At the center of this collaboration sits the first product release: the ADIZERO ADIOS PRO 4 SATISFY. Technically, nothing changes. The shoe still features full-length Lightstrike Pro foam, carbon-infused Energy Rods 2.0, LIGHTTRAXION technology and Continental rubber. In other words: an Adios Pro 4 in its most performance-oriented form.
The difference lies primarily in the aesthetic approach. Each side of the shoe uses a different color palette inspired by mismatched skate shoes and DIY paint techniques. Versions feature military green, earthy brown or black shades, while the Energy Rods receive a matte silver finish inspired by off-road buggies. Visually, there is no way to mistake it for a regular Adios Pro. You can clearly spot the SATISFY signature integrated into the three stripes logo and underneath the outsole.
Ultimately, though, the most interesting part might not even be the shoe itself. Or even the event. It’s what this collaboration says about the current evolution of running culture. For several years now, the boundaries have become increasingly blurred. Running is no longer only about finish times, VO2 max or carbon plates. It’s also about identity, community, aesthetics and cultural belonging. The sport is evolving. Run clubs are everywhere and are now becoming genuine social spaces. A simple after-work run quickly transforms into a community event. Brands want to position themselves at the center of this movement and are building worlds as much as they are building products.
adidas seems to have understood something important: today, a high-performance shoe alone is no longer enough to inspire people. You need to tell a story. With SATISFY, the German brand is no longer just selling a shoe or a technology. It is trying to embrace a mindset, a rougher and more cultural aesthetic, almost countercultural. And that’s probably where this story becomes truly interesting. Because deep down, the real question may not be whether this Adios Pro 4 is successful or not. The real question is: how far can brands appropriate counterculture… before eventually transforming it completely? One thing is certain: whether people love it or hate it, very few collaborations have generated this much discussion lately.
✔ The adidas ADIZERO ADIOS PRO 4 SATISFY will be available on May 22, 2026 for €300 on satisfyrunning.com and adidas.com.

Clément LABORIEUX
Journalist