The Total 90 franchise is back, and it arrives without boots. Travis Scott's Cactus Jack and Nike have officially launched their World Cup apparel collection, reviving one of Nike's most recognizable early-2000s football lines as a full capsule of jerseys, graphic tees, hoodies, caps, and track jackets. The collection covers ten nations. It covers zero footwear categories.The scope is notable. Cactus Jack collaborations with Nike have historically centered on sneakers: the Air Jordan 1 Low, the Air Max 1, the various Dunk iterations that defined the partnership's commercial peak. Apparel existed, but as a supporting layer, released alongside the shoes that drove the conversation. This collection inverts that structure. The T90 name, which Nike built in the early 2000s around a line of football boots worn by Wayne Rooney and Francesco Totti, now appears on jerseys and track jackets. The boots are absent.The absence is not accidental. Nike's football boot strategy for the 2026 World Cup has already been articulated through other channels: the Mercurial Vapor 17, the Phantom GX, the performance lines that carry the on-pitch technology. Scott's T90 collection is not positioned as performance gear. It is positioned as lifestyle football, the visual language of the sport without the functional infrastructure. Jerseys you wear to watch the match, not play it.The collection leans into Y2K football aesthetics across ten national team themes. Image: NikeThis is category drift in real time. Scott entered the Nike relationship as a sneaker collaborator, the musician who could move limited-edition footwear at scale. The T90 collection repositions him as a sportswear designer, someone whose name can carry an entire apparel line without a shoe to anchor it. The shift has been building: the Jordan Brand apparel, the Dior partnership, the various capsule drops that expanded beyond footwear. But a ten-nation football collection, timed to the World Cup, is the clearest statement yet that Cactus Jack is no longer just a sneaker label.The Y2K framing is deliberate. The original T90 era, roughly 2000 to 2010, coincided with a specific visual language: bold graphics, exaggerated silhouettes, the pre-minimalism moment before football kit design shifted toward clean lines and performance fabrics. Nike has revived that language selectively in recent years, testing appetite for retro football aesthetics. Scott's collection pushes the revival further, treating the T90 name as a design archive rather than a product line.Ten nations, zero boots. The Cactus Jack logo appears on football jerseys now. The category has drifted.