Mint Districts Fashion

The Best Cyberpunk Techwear Brands Worth Actually Buying

Cyberpunk fashion took the futuristic streetwear that was once reserved for Blade Runner cosplay and turned it into everyday functional wear. The brands here build clothes that actually work: waterproof shells, breathable laminates, modular pockets, and adjustable cuffs for navigating the city. But they look like they came from 2077. This is not costume. This is functional gear with an aesthetic.

Fashion · 6 Brands

The Cyberpunk Techwear District

Riot Division

Kyiv, Ukraine

Urban tactical gear for the modern explorer.

Riot Division started in Ukraine making functional gear for protest and urban use. Their modular cargo systems, waterproof shells, and tactical vests evolved into a full techwear collection. The brand's signature is the detachable pocket system: snap-on attachments that let you reconfigure your loadout for different missions. Made in Ukraine with materials sourced from Korea and Japan.

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Guerrilla Group

Taipei, Taiwan

Functional apparel with a futuristic narrative.

Guerrilla Group makes techwear that reads like a spy thriller. Their S5 line of cargo pants and jackets features concealed pockets, adjustable ventilation, and modular attachment points. The brand collaborates with Material Technologies for fabric innovation and produces in Taiwan. The aesthetic leans military-technical without crossing into costume territory.

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Cyber-Techwear

Global

Futuristic streetwear and cyberpunk aesthetic clothing.

Cyber-Techwear is a curated multi-brand store that stocks techwear from brands worldwide. Their own label produces basics in the aesthetic: cargo pants, windbreakers, mesh tops. The advantage here is variety: they carry multiple styles under one checkout. Good entry point if you want to explore the aesthetic without committing to a single brand.

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Techwear Storm

Global

Premium techwear with cyberpunk aesthetics.

Techwear Storm stocks a curated selection of techwear brands plus their own line of jackets, pants, and accessories. Their proprietary Storm-Tech fabric is a 3-layer laminate that competes with Gore-Tex at half the price. The aesthetic leans cyberpunk: reflective details, asymmetric zippers, and modular attachment systems.

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Code of Bell

Hong Kong

Modular accessories for urban carry.

Code of Bell makes the bags and accessories that complete a techwear outfit. Their XLA carabiner system, modular pouches, and sling bags attach to any belt or strap. The design philosophy is borrowed from tactical gear: everything has a purpose, everything is adjustable. If your jacket and pants are sorted, Code of Bell handles the carry.

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About This District

Techwear sits at the intersection of utilitarianism and speculative fiction. The key pieces are: a hardshell jacket with sealed seams, cargo pants with modular attachments, a crossbody bag or chest rig, and footwear that can handle wet pavement and concrete. Fabrics define the category: Gore-Tex, eVent, Dermizax, and other waterproof-breathable membranes. Silhouettes lean oversized or structured with dropped crotches and dropped shoulders. The color palette lives in black, grey, olive, and occasional neon accents. This is clothing built for the city as infrastructure.