This story is part of our new Future of Gaming series, a three-site look at gamingâs most pioneering technologies, players, and makers.
Video game fashion is often uninspired, Hot Topic-adjacent fare: T-shirts with a game logo ironed on the front, or zip-up sweatshirts with a garish all-over print of an animated character. Itâs rare to see a piece of merch that feels like itâs pulled from a game-world (like the Disco Elysium jacket) or one thatâs subtle enough you could wear it out to dinner without anyone knowing youâre repping your favorite RPG.
When I first saw âThe Lands Between,â the Elden Ring-inspired collection from luxury streetwear brand ARK/8, I felt like I was looking at the future of game-related fashion. Nothing is so high-concept that itâs unwearable (the line is still firmly rooted in a streetwear aesthetic) but the entire collection could easily be worn by someone strutting through SoHo, or captured and posted on Instagram by Watching New York and no one would know it references a video game.
A lush, blood-red faux-fur coat that looks like the lion draped over Godfreyâs shoulder, an oversized, menswear-inspired crisp white button-down with Queen Marika stretched across the back, a few elegantly distressed crewnecksâall if it is so chic and so effortlessly cool that I canât help but get excited looking at everything.
I was so curious about the person behind the designs that I reached out via email to ARK/8âs creative director, Dimitri van Eetvelde, to learn what inspires him and what he thinks is the future of gaming fashion.

Finding fashion inspiration in Elden Ring
First, van Eetvelde made one thing very clear: ARK/8 isnât a video game merch company, itâs a âfashion brand with gaming and pop culture as its DNA.â He likened it to how âskate is part of the DNA of brands like Supreme or Vans.â For him, too many pieces of game-related clothing are âvery safeâ items like âprinted basics or pieces that are more suited for cosplay and gaming conventions.â
âThe problem is that most of the licensed companies donât care about gaming, itâs just a business decision. They sell the same T-shirt, whether itâs Jack Daniels or Iron Maiden or Assassinâs Creed,â he said. Van Eetvelde understands this approach, because heâs done it beforeâhis first fashion company, Level Up Wear, was a printed tee and outerwear line started back in 2007, which focused on printing branded content on high-quality t-shirts. For him, Level Up Wear âwas the inception of the concept of gaming and quality together,â though he soon reached a creative limit, and wanted to find a way to further explore high-quality garments and game-inspired designs. Thatâs when ARK/8 was born, fully materializing in 2019 after several iterations (including, briefly, as Italian-made high-end jewelry).

The Lands Between collection marries high-end fashion with gaming, but not reductivelyâthough items like the Boss Door t-shirt or the Queen Marika button-down clearly feature more obvious game references, thereâs a sense of evocation at play here, as well. âWe wanted to create a collection that didnât feel like a repeat of the gaming merch template focusing on key characters or iconography, or using heavily illustrated prints,â van Eetvelde said. âElden Ring was going to be approached not from a traditional asset/graphic perspective, but from a texture, world immersion angle.â
Brilliantly, the design team leaned into âexploration and content discoveryâ which van Eetvelde noted is a key part of Elden Ring gameplay. From there, two visual themes emerged: maps and the Tarnished aesthetic. âThe map is so beautifully made,â van Eetvelde said, âThe challenge was a technical one at that point, as getting it to look vibrant and detailed on different fabrics took a few tries.â The resulting âOur Lands Between Bomber Jacket,â however, is pretty wildâa âseemingly infinite printâ of the in-game map, swirling colors across the modelâs torso. The Tarnished aesthetic shows in the distressed but robust crewnecks, which van Eetvelde suggested mimic how players start out their Elden Ring experiences. âYou start at the bottom in the game, your clothes are ragged. Itâs rough, like in most FromSoftware experiences, but thereâs also that robustness, that persistence of getting up and dusting yourself off, death after death.â
The future of video game fashion
With individual items ranging from $145 to $2500, itâs a gorgeousâalbeit priceyâcollection that elevates game-related fashion, and according to its chief designer, The Lands Between is just the beginning for ARK/8. The Elden Ring collection is the brandâs âguinea pig,â according to van Eetveldeâhe gave me a sneak peek at a cool, splashy Overwatch drop coming soon that features a D.Va bodysuit I simply must have and a very cool Genji-inspired zip-up.

âARK/8âs mission is to establish a platform to elevate the conversation around gaming and the incredible art, music and narratives that underpin these amazing entertainment creations,â van Eetvelde said. âThereâs a constant to it, itâs not just a one-off like most collabs. Fashion is a way to express our passion and show gaming in a new light.â
During our chat, he cited a few other examples of the somewhat dissonant worlds of fashion and gaming meeting and making something incredible. âI liked the Han Kjobenhavn X Diablo IV runway pieces for example, as they did push the envelope. I think the LOEWE X GHIBLI one was also really good because Jonathan Anderson really has a passion for Ghibli movies and it reflects on the whole collection. Itâs brimming with details and complex executions. I want to see more of that.â
For game developers and fashion brands, ARK/8âs ethos can and should be mined for future collaborations. I want to see more high-concept runway pieces, more elevated streetwear looks, and less gaudy, ironed-on 1-Up mushrooms and zip-up sweatshirts meant to look like Samusâ power suit. Video games are visual marvels, brimming with color and creativityâlets make more clothes and accessories that speak to that.