wearverse Drops “Command Military” VRChat Outfit May 29 – 9 Avatars Supported, 3,000-6,000 Yen
Index
Appland Inc. will begin selling “Command Military,” a new outfit from “wearverse,” an apparel brand for the social VR platform “VRChat,” on BOOTH from Friday, May 29, 2026. The piece fuses two genres – “uniform” and “military” – and supports a total of nine avatars at launch.
Key points of this article
- Sales start date: Friday, May 29, 2026
- Price range: 3,000-6,000 yen
- Supported avatars: Nine in total at launch
- Sales channel: The official “wearverse” shop on BOOTH
About the new “Command Military” outfit
“Command Military” is a VRChat outfit that takes the crisp silhouette of a uniform as its base and incorporates the decorations and details of military wear. Built around a monotone palette with vivid light green as an accent, it achieves a military look that is both urban and refined.
The monotone coloring blends naturally into cityscapes, while the light green applied at key points becomes an accent that pops on screen, giving it a strong presence in photo scenes. It is designed for a wide range of uses, from everyday world exploration to extraordinary scenes such as events and photo shoots.

Nine supported avatars, and the development background
wearverse has previously released outfits such as “Urban Classical,” “Magical,” and “Shuka,” proposing coordinates ranging from easy everyday designs to Japanese-style looks and pieces for special occasions. This “Command Military” piece more clearly expresses the brand concept of “fusing different genres to broaden the story of the wearer.”
The supported avatars expanded to eight with the previous “Shuka” outfit – “Shinra,” “Celestia,” “Rindou,” “Kikyou,” “Manuka,” “Shinano,” “Kipfel,” and “Lurune” – and “Miltina” was added in a post-release update. “Command Military” launches supporting a total of nine avatars, including Miltina, right from release.

Looking ahead
wearverse is continuously working to expand its supported avatars so that users can choose outfits to match the avatars they actually use. The brand says it will keep considering further avatar support based on users’ usage and requests.
Appland, the operator, started out in apparel and has set a policy of expanding into avatars and worlds, aiming to broaden the culture set on the metaverse stage.
Impressions and outlook
As VRChat’s avatar culture matures, genre-fusing outfits are becoming a presence that broadens users’ self-expression. Expanding supported avatars to nine and ensuring that a wide range of users can wear the outfit from the moment of release shows that metaverse apparel is shifting from “for a few specific avatars” to “an option everyone can choose.” Appland’s move to bring the knowledge cultivated through running a VTuber production into the metaverse is also worth continuing to watch.
Source: PR TIMES
