The toe box can feel a bit rigid initially—needs a short break-in. And if you have a wider foot, you might find it narrow. Also, at $200, it's purely a lifestyle shoe now. Don't ball in these expecting modern performance. It's about the look and the vibe, not cutting-edge tech. Comparing it to, say, a Jordan 1? The "Jordan 6" is generally more comfortable for longer periods because of that Air unit. Versus a Jordan 11? It's less performance-oriented and more of a lifestyle piece now. Within the Jordan series, the 6 sits in a nice spot—recognizable, wearable, and with a distinct 90s vibe that's hard to beat. Wrapping up—this Air Jordan 6 release gets a thumbs up from me. It does what it's supposed to: delivers a faithful retro of a classic. The pros (style, build, history) outweigh the cons (break-in, weight) for most sneakerheads. Would I recommend it? Yeah, especially for your first pair of 6s. Alright, so I just got the Nike Air Jordan 6 'Infrared' in hand. First impression? The shape is "super" clean, and the nubuck feels premium. The black and infrared colorway is a classic for a reason—it just pops. The build quality on this Air Jordan 6 feels solid right out of the box, no major flaws. Really happy with the initial look.