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Brice Partouche has never cared much for permission

If Brice had asked adidas whether putting 50 ultra runners and members of the media inside a concrete skate park in 40-degree desert heat while hardcore bands played at full volume was a good idea, the safest assumption is the answer would have been no. But SATISFY has never operated from consensus logic. That is exactly why the brand matters.

Since we first featured Brice Partouche in Office Magazine years ago, SATISFY has evolved organically into one of the most influential brands in contemporary performance culture. What began as a niche running project from Paris now exists at the intersection of fashion, endurance, music, and philosophy. The focus has only become sharper: trail running, ultra running, and the athletes pushing both themselves and the narrative of what the human body is capable of.

The new ADIZERO ADIOS PRO 4 SATISFY reflects that tension perfectly. adidas brings elite race-day engineering; SATISFY brings emotional texture and cultural friction. The shoe feels less designed for the podium than for the psychology of the person chasing it. Matte silver Energy Rods inspired by off-road buggies. Spray-painted asymmetric fades referencing skate culture and DIY aesthetics. Reflective three-stripes disappearing and reappearing depending on the light. Even standing still, the shoe looks in motion.

The split colorway itself comes from somewhere deeply personal. Brice referenced growing up in the ’80s wearing two different colored pairs of Converse All Stars a small act of rebellion rooted in skate culture and individuality. That same instinct carries through the shoe now. Not performance for performance’s sake, but performance with personality and attitude embedded into it.

But the real story here is bigger than footwear.

For years, running brands sold discipline, optimization, and performance metrics. SATISFY introduced something different: emotion. Running as escape. Their world is filled with ultra runners, noise musicians, ravers, mountain climbers, and people searching for something beyond physical fitness. The collaboration with adidas signals a larger shift happening inside running culture itself. Performance and fashion are no longer separate conversations. Neither are sport and subculture.

At The Circle Pit, nobody really cared where the race began or ended. People ran until their bodies dissolved into instinct. Music got louder. Dust filled the air. Time blurred. Somewhere in the middle of the desert, SATISFY and adidas managed to create something increasingly rare in modern brand culture: an experience that actually felt dangerous, emotional, and alive.

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