Arc’teryx has been steadily expanding its footwear lineup since opening its dedicated shoe design center in Portland, Oregon — and the Sylan has been one of its most visible experiments.
The model first debuted in spring 2024 as a fast, efficient trail runner built for “linking peaks,” a concept that quickly grew into a broader lineup that included Gore-Tex and Pro variants.

Now, two years later — and after a full cycle of athlete feedback — Arc’teryx has unveiled the Sylan 2. The update brings something the brand has never previously attempted in footwear: the integration of modern “super-shoe” technology, a move that should immediately grab the attention of trail runners chasing the sport’s bleeding edge.
It may also catch the eye of rival footwear brands that have quietly benefited from Arc’teryx lagging behind in the trail-running arms race — because the Sylan 2 suggests that gap may be closing fast.
A new trail shoe with “super” DNA

Arc’teryx didn’t make small tweaks going from the original Sylan to the Sylan 2. The overhaul is substantial. The brand managed to shave 20 grams from the shoe — no small feat in a category where designers obsess over single-digit weight savings — while simultaneously upgrading nearly every performance component.







