Nike reinvents movement with powered footwear, aiming to do for running what e-bikes did for urban mobility. The sports giant unveiled Project Amplify, the world’s first powered footwear system designed to make running and walking accessible to millions who previously found sustained movement intimidating or physically out of reach. Unlike elite performance gear designed to shave seconds off race times, Project Amplify targets everyday athletes who want to move more, go farther, and actually enjoy the experience.
Designer: Nike
While several startups explored exoskeletal running concepts, Nike’s Project Amplify is the first to reach this level of integration and scalability. The announcement positions powered footwear as an inclusivity tool rather than a performance enhancer, explicitly designed for recreational athletes running at a 10-12 minute mile pace. For a parent jogging with a stroller or a new runner tackling hill repeats, Project Amplify promises a new layer of agency. This approach echoes Nike’s founding ethos that “if you have a body, you are an athlete,” updated for an era where assistive technology can remove physical barriers to participation.
System Design and Human Integration
The system combines four components into a wearable exoskeleton: a lightweight motor, a drive belt, a rechargeable battery cuff, and a carbon fiber-plated running shoe that functions with or without the robotic assist. Built on motion algorithms developed at Nike’s Sport Research Lab, the design targets natural lower leg and ankle movement patterns. Athletes who tested the system describe it as feeling like “a second set of calf muscles” or “part of their body” during use.
The design goal centers on augmentation rather than replacement. Nike’s approach makes uphill terrain feel like flat ground and turns a typical 12-minute mile into a 10-minute mile with less perceived exertion. The carbon fiber shoe maintains performance credentials even when disconnected from the motor system, addressing concerns about dependency on powered assistance.
Testing involved over 400 athletes across 2.4 million steps (equivalent to 12,000 laps around a 200-meter track), with Nike iterating through nine hardware versions to achieve the seamless integration athletes reported. Michael Donaghu, VP of Create The Future, Emerging Sport and Innovation at Nike, positions the technology as something that “adds movement to your life,” whether that means exploring new routes, extending outdoor time, or making exercise adherence sustainable long-term.
Notice the seamless integration of the drive belt and the sculpted battery cuff in Nike’s official imagery. The ergonomic and aesthetic details set a new standard for wearable robotics.
Inclusive Performance Philosophy
What distinguishes Project Amplify is the user-centered design philosophy behind it. Rather than optimizing performance for competitive runners shaving seconds off race times, Nike explicitly designed for recreational athletes running at a 10-12 minute mile pace. The target users are people who want to extend their walking commutes, run longer without fatigue, or simply make movement feel less intimidating and more fun.
This inclusive approach to performance design updates Nike’s founding ethos for an era where assistive technology can democratize access to movement experiences previously limited by physical capability or conditioning. The development process reflects this commitment to real-world usability, with testing focused on achieving the seamless integration that makes athletes report the system feels like part of their body.
Project Amplify launches alongside three other Nike innovations this October: Air apparel technology in the Therma-FIT Air Milano Jacket, advanced cooling systems in Aero-FIT performance gear, and neuroscience-based footwear designed to promote calm and focus. Still in performance readiness testing, the powered footwear system is being developed in partnership with robotics company Dephy, with broad consumer availability planned for the coming years.
With Project Amplify, Nike lays the groundwork for a new era of accessible, technology-driven movement. Expect follow-ups as the story develops.
The post Nike Project Amplify: Powered Footwear Designed to Make Movement Accessible first appeared on Yanko Design.

