He loses the boots to my knowledge after the right with Furiosa but his gear does change constantly.
Those photos of the Rossiters surfaced when filming was happening and were taken by the Shoe Department from Fury Road and put up on their official site/blog.
When they did that somebody here posted a thread on it with all the photos included but the topic was mysteriously deleted and the site blog removed. Apparently the collector of the boots who donated them to the Fury Road Shoe Department was none too pleased about photos being taken and put online, or at least thats how the story goes...
I have the notes some where what style army boot they are but not the resources to fully share what they are(way too much effort by phone browser). Not as expensive as Rossi's but more than I want to pay for modern combat boots.
I'll have to watch thunderdome to confirm the basketball shoes.
Under armor valstez tactical boots. Probably tan more than black because of dirtying them up, they still appear lighter than full on black.
The vest is a south African defense force m83 battle vest. With mods. Not sure what the base vest is with the water or gas bag on his back.
Holster is drop leg condor molle with a bike inner tube. Holster is condor ambidextrous flock. Gun is a glock.
The leg brace is not the pick up tailgate. Something else even though they had the screen used road warrior brace and boots and the tail gates are still fairly easy to get.
If I remember correctly, gameinformer mentioned in an article about the Mad Max game that there's an easter egg in Max's garage where light shining onto a wall forms the shape of Australia (or something akin to that). Who knows, maybe it's some sort of connection
In the original MadMax there was all sorts of hidden messages if you look carefully enough, daresay Miller did it again with Fury Road.
Cant really recall an hidden ones in MM2 or 3 but
Harvey Weinstein on "Life is Beautiful" and "Road Warrior".
"Life is Beautiful" owes credit to "Mad Max." Weinstein and Roberto Benigni added narration to the beginning and end of "Life is Beautiful" to frame the story after some found its humorous depiction of the Holocaust to be a "disgrace." "We took that from 'Mad Max,' so watch the movie again. We owe George Miller ... because the whole son thing at the end was 'The Road Warrior.'"