No, if: you're a performance purist, you need arch support, or you only buy OGs. It fills a specific niche – and for that niche, it executes very, very well. Here's the real talk: the pros? Incredible comfort for casual use, a recognizable—yet fresh—look, and it's typically easier to get than retros. Cons? The materials aren't premium, and it lacks that "special" feeling of a classic Jordan release. For $180, you're paying mostly for the look and the cushioning tech. On camera, the details pop. The way the suede hits play with light on this 'University Blue' pair is clean. The Jordan 11 CMFT Low has a premium aesthetic that doesn't scream "performance." It's a sharp, modern sneaker that stands on its own within the broader Jordan series lineage, for sure. The "biggest pro" for me? "Comfort", hands down. The "Air Jordan 11 CMFT Low" uses a different tooling, and it's a game-changer for walking around. The materials are also nice—soft textile and synthetic suede. It's a Jordan you can actually wear all day without thinking about it. For a $170 sneaker, that's a "major" win in my book.