
The Trophy Room x Air Jordan 1 Low Away flipped for £900+ from a £140 retail—driven by limited availability and massive hype in the sneaker scene.
Ronnie Fieg’s Kith brand teamed up with Marvel and ASICS to release the ‘Super Villains’ Pack—featuring bold designs inspired by legendary characters like Venom, Green Goblin, and Doctor Doom. While not as limited as other collaborations, the pack’s multi-brand appeal, premium materials, and comic-book nostalgia generated strong resale momentum. The release capitalised on pop culture hype and sneakerhead interest alike, delivering over 100% returns for those who acted quickly.
Entered Kith’s online draw and monitored Shopify closely.
Used autofill tools and SMS verification to check out in under 10 seconds.
Prioritized villain colorways (Venom, Doom) with higher sell-through rates.
Listed immediately on StockX, GOAT, and Laced before saturation.
Tracked sold listings on eBay to time optimal resale windows.
25/07/2024
Kith debuts the Super Villains collection at San Diego Comic-Con, previewing select colorways like Green Goblin, Silver Surfer, and the Venom/Spider-Man double pack.
05/08/2024
New images, character bios, and comic book tie-ins start rolling out on Kith’s blog and major sneaker sites, building hype ahead of the online drop.
09/08/2024
The full Super Villains Pack (Gel‑1130, Kayano 14, GT‑2160 variants) launches via Kith.com and app. Instant sell‑outs; manual users and bots scramble to secure pairs.
10/08/2024
Sneakers flood marketplaces. Early flips hit resale prices around £300+, especially for the rare Venom/Spider-Man and Green Goblin editions
▶️ GOAT Search
This flip hit the sweet spot between pop culture nostalgia and sneaker trend cycles. The triple-brand collab made noise beyond the sneaker community, and smart buyers moved quickly to secure pairs. Holding key colorways for 1–2 weeks post-launch delivered steady profits. The ‘Super Villains’ Pack was a lower-risk, high-reward flip for anyone tuned in to both comics and kicks.
The Trophy Room x Air Jordan 1 Low Away flipped for £900+ from a £140 retail—driven by limited availability and massive hype in the sneaker scene.
Nigel Sylvester’s Air Jordan 4 collab sold out fast, flipping for £210+ on resale markets after launching at just £130 retail.