Callaway’s Chrome Tour and Chrome Tour X get the retro treatment with a limited-edition return to the company’s original Rule 35 golf balls—the ones that started it all.
Retro having a golfing moment. TaylorMade kicked off last year with a TP5 comeback. There are rumors of another retro ball release on the way, and now Callaway is getting in on the action with a limited edition that’s actually worth getting a little nostalgic about. The Chrome Tour Retro brings back the aesthetic of the Rule 35. And in a rare move for the limited edition lineup, it’s available on both the Chrome Tour and Chrome Tour X.
Holy 360 Yellow Stripe, Batman.


Rule 35: Enjoy the game
For those who weren’t around for it (or who just blocked out the early 2000s for other reasons), a little history.
In 2000, Callaway made its first serious push into the golf ball market with the Rule 35 line. The concept was simple and kind of brilliant. At the time, the Rules of Golf contained 34 rules – the last of which, Rule 34, dealt with disputes and decisions. Basically, procedural fine print when golfers can’t agree on whether a decision was correctly implemented. Sticky stuff.
Callaway’s addition? Rule 35: Enjoy the game.
The line-up was deliberately uncomplicated. Two balls. Blue for softer feel. Red for stronger feeling. Choose one. Go play. In a market that was (and still is) drowning in compression numbers, layer counts, and increasingly granular performance claims, Rule 35 cut through the noise by essentially telling players to stop thinking about it.
The Rules of Golf have been around ever since upgraded– condensed from 34 rules to 24 in 2019 – but the sentiment behind Rule 35 still lives on.


A personal aside
I really like most limited editions, but this one actually resonates with me.
By the time I started playing golf, the Rule 35 stuff had already been superseded. The HX line was the ball dujour or maybe the ball before the ball dujour. The thing is, the first golf balls I ever bought were HX Blue and HX Red, proudly picked up off eBay in AAA condition for about $12. I knew nothing about golf balls at the time. In fact, I didn’t know much about anything golf-related, which is why I also bought 1,000 plastic overlaid logo ball markers on the same shopping spree. I think I still have about 960 of them.
But, natural contrarian that I am, the hex dimpled thing looked (and sounded) cool, so the Callaway was my original ball of choice for about three rounds. On the course, they cut into the woods just like any other ball I tried in those early years.
Ah, memories.
The thing is, there is a direct line from Rule 35 to HX to Chrome Soft to the Chrome Tour. This is where the history of the Callaway ball began, and to see that original design in what is now a legitimate tour ball is a nice touch.


What you are getting
The Chrome Tour Retro takes the original Rule 35 design — Callaway’s classic block font, the original brand — and places it on the 2026 Chrome Tour platform. The same ball. Different skins. All the performance you’d expect from the Chrome Tour, now dressed up like it’s 2000 and Callaway just crashed the premium ball party.
What makes this release stand out beyond the nostalgia factor is availability. Most Callaway limited editions only come on the Chrome Tour. Retro is available on both Chrome Tour and Chrome Tour X meaning X players aren’t left out for once. It’s a small thing, but if you’re a Chrome Tour X loyalist, you know how often you get ignored on the limited edition front.
Now, can we get a triple diamond?


Why retro works
Limited edition golf balls have become as much a content game as a product game. We’ve seen dinosaurs, hamburgers, St. Paddy’s Day shamrocks, and stretch patterns in every color imaginable. Some are fun. Some are forgettable. Most exist primarily to give people something to post on Instagram.
If you have a 35-year-old golf shirt and the pit stains aren’t too bad, I promise, if you list it on eBay, someone will buy it. Same with old hats – this sweat ring is not a flaw. It’s part of the charm. Retro sells because it connects people to something that felt real, and golf has a lot going for it.
Retro is different. There is real brand equity in going back to a design that meant something. Rule 35 was not just a ball. It was Callaway’s statement that it belonged in the premium ball conversation, a conversation that has been dominated by Titleist for as long as anyone can remember.
Twenty-six years later, the Chrome Tour is the real deal. Putting the Rule 35 design on it isn’t just nostalgia for nostalgia’s sake. It’s a reminder of how far the product has come.


Availability
The Callaway Chrome Tour Retro and Chrome Tour X Retro are available now at CallawaGolf.com while supplies last.

