Reebok marks 40 years of Dragon Quest with a collaboration that brings together one of gaming’s most enduring RPG franchises with one of the brand’s most technically distinctive silhouettes. The Insta Pump Fury 94 anchors the release, arriving in a colorway and design details pulled directly from all 11 previous Dragon Quest titles, from the original 1986 entry through Dragon Quest XI: Echoes of an Elusive Age. The breadth of that reference range makes the sneaker closer to a retrospective than a standard licensed drop, embedding the entire history of the franchise in a single shoe rather than pulling from one game or character. The collaboration will be available for pre-order via Reebok Japan on May 27, 2026.
The Insta Pump Fury 94 is a fitting silhouette choice for a collaboration so steeped in nostalgia. The shoe debuted in 1994 as one of the most technically ambitious sneakers Reebok had produced, built around an inflatable polymer bladder that wraps around a breathable mesh base for a custom fit without laces. The futuristic, almost mechanical construction has evolved into something that now reads as vintage-futuristic rather than simply dated, a silhouette that carries its own nostalgia while remaining visually distinct from anything else on the market. Combining it with Dragon Quest’s 40-year visual history, which spans pixel art, illustrated characters, and distinctive logo treatments over four decades, creates a natural resonance between two things that came out in the same general era and have each maintained a devoted audience ever since.
Forty years of Dragon Quest: Why it still matters
Dragon Quest was first launched in Japan in 1986, developed by Yuji Horiiillustrated by Akira Toriyama of Dragon Ball fame, and scored by Koichi Sugiyama. The timing was significant; it arrived just a year after Nintendo released the Famicom in North America as the NES, and it helped establish the template for what a Japanese role-playing game could be. The genre’s core mechanics—turn-based combat, character leveling, and story-driven exploration—were not invented by Dragon Quest. However, the franchise codified them into a format that millions of players recognized and returned to for generations.
In Japan, the series achieved a cultural status that its Western counterpart, Final Fantasy, despite comparable worldwide sales, never quite replicated domestically. Early releases of Dragon Quest caused such significant disruption to school attendance and workplace productivity that the Japanese government reportedly encouraged publishers to release sequels only on weekends.
That’s the kind of cultural saturation most franchises never approach. The series sold more than 90 million copies worldwide across its major titles and spin-offs, and Toriyama’s character designs, particularly the Slime, became as recognizable as any mascot in gaming history. His death in 2024 was mourned by the global gaming community as the loss of one of the medium’s fundamental visual voices.
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Reebok Dragon Quest collaboration: The sneaker design
Reebok releases a Dragon Quest Instapump Fury collection in Japan to celebrate the franchise’s 40th anniversary
A total of 11 colorways, one for each title in the series
🗓️27 May pic.twitter.com/abrZAXXZkf
— Modern Notoriety (@ModernNotoriety) May 21, 2026
In addition to the Insta Pump Fury 94, the collaboration includes a range of vintage-style graphic T-shirts featuring Dragon Quest logos and graphics in a range of color combinations. They are all set against a washed charcoal gray base, a production choice that gives the prints a worn, lived-in quality consistent with the retrospective spirit of a 40th anniversary release. The T-shirts sit next to the sneakers and do not function as a secondary product; both carry the nostalgic imagery of the collaboration with equal dedication.
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Where and how to get it
The pre-order window opens on May 27, 2026, exclusively via Reebok Japan’s website. The exclusive availability for Japan is not unexpected for a Dragon quest edition; The franchise has historically maintained its largest and most engaged fanbase in Japan, where it occupies a cultural position that its Western reception has never quite matched. For collectors outside Japan looking to access the collaboration, third-party purchasing services and potential gray market availability will likely be the main routes after launch. The May 27 date is one to note early if regional access is an issue.
Featured image: Reebok

