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NBA and Japan’s NINJA BASKETBALL ARMY Reimagine a 16th-Century World Where Ninjas Settled Wars With Basketball

NBA and Japan's NINJA BASKETBALL ARMY Reimagine a 16th-Century World Where Ninjas Settled Wars With Basketball

NINJA BASKETBALL ARMY, an NBA-sanctioned story brand directed by Japanese creative collective NINJA BASKETBALL ANONYMOUS, launched in May 2026, introducing a parallel-universe narrative in which ninja clans across a fractured 16th-century Japan pursue unification through basketball rather than bloodshed. Led by creator and director Takaya Mitsunaga, the project spans story, design, character, and fashion, building a self-contained world that draws equally from American basketball culture and Japanese historical identity.

The world NINJA BASKETBALL ARMY constructs is specific in its internal logic. In this fictional timeline, the feudal lords of warring Japan agree to settle their territorial disputes through peaceful competition rather than continued warfare. The sport they land on is rooted in “temari,” a traditional ball game that had spread across Japan since the Heian period. Ninjas from each domain trade their swords and shuriken for basketballs, shooting into baskets made for “momo,” the peach, a symbol historically associated with warding off evil. From that premise, an entire indigenous basketball culture takes shape across the archipelago, with each clan developing distinct techniques and incorporating their own ninjutsu into gameplay.

That world-building extends into the visual language of the brand. Each ninja clan carries a new team logo and kamon, a family crest, drawn from the specific history and characteristics of different regions across Japan. The decorative script used throughout the designs was developed in collaboration with the Iga Ueno Chamber of Commerce and Industry, organizations with a documented historical connection to ninja culture. The typeface is inspired by “Jindai Moji,” a script system theorized to have been used by ninjas and later codified based on Edo-period literary sources. Within the fiction, the ninjas deploy these encoded characters across written documents and rope cords as a form of covert communication.

The NBA has steadily expanded its cultural footprint in Japan over recent decades, with the country producing players who have competed at the league’s highest level and a domestic fanbase that ranks among its most engaged international markets. NINJA BASKETBALL ARMY operates in that broader context, but approaches it from a creative direction that inverts the usual flow. Rather than Japan adopting the visual vocabulary of American basketball, the project pulls American basketball into a distinctly Japanese historical imagination, filtered through the aesthetic frameworks of ukiyo-e woodblock printing, clan heraldry, and feudal world-building.

The collective behind it, NINJA BASKETBALL ANONYMOUS, is made up of artists, art directors, designers, and photographers with ties to basketball culture and connections spanning the United States and Japan. Mitsunaga, who has presented work on stages both domestically and internationally, serves as director. The brand made its first public-facing appearance through 初鳴 -SHOMEI-, an art exhibition and pre-order showcase staged at Daikanyama Space R in Tokyo, where upcoming art works and apparel were presented within an immersive environment using traditional Japanese rooms and garden settings to stage the intersection of basketball and Japanese aesthetics.

With its debut activation behind it, NINJA BASKETBALL ARMY’s official launch is set to coincide with the opening of the NBA 2026-27 season. Follow the brand via their official website and on Instagram.


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