The TRU shares the heritage of the issue ACUs right down to the button fly and drawstring waistband on the pants and the pen pocket on the left sleeve of the shirt. At first I thought: A drawstring waistband on duty pants? Who wants that? Then I realized the first thing to come off when I get home is my belt and that the drawstring keeps the pants up without a belt. On a more functional side, the drawstring helps keep your pants up if you ever have to go into the water.
The TRU shirt features a Mandarin-style collar that lies flat when you fold it back in the traditional shirt style or when closed it comes up high enough to protect your neck from being rubbed by a tactical/raid vest. This might sound like a small thing but that type of a brush burn is most uncomfortable and takes ages to heal. There are no lower jacket pockets so that it lays flat and won't bind under a load-bearing vest or web belt, again reducing wear spots.
Each sleeve of the TRU shirt has a Velcro-covered pocket. This facilitates attachment of your agency patch or other identification such as glint or IR markers. The pockets are large enough to accommodate a BlackBerry, many of the new smaller GPS units, or most any cell phone on the market.
The TRU pants pockets are one of the uniform's best features. All are closed with heavy-duty Velcro and, unlike BDUs, they lay flat, reducing the odds that they will catch on things when you are moving. The thigh pockets have an interior pocket to secure small items such as a GPS, cell phone, folding knife, etc.; that's something BDUs don't have. Each leg has a lower calf pocket, which at first glance seems useless. The more I wore the TRUs, however, the more I realized that this pocket is good for storing empty magazines, a bushing wrench, or a small pocket tool. After all, it seems that we are always sitting or kneeling when we need to access these items. So having them on the calf is a good idea.
Tru-Spec offers the TRU in a wide range of colors: black, navy, olive, khaki, woodland, three colors of desert, and now Multicam, which is a very versatile pattern. Solid colors are made from 65/35 polyester-cotton rip stop and the camo patterns are 50/50 nylon-cotton rip stop. Both materials are comfortable, highly fade resistant, wash well, and should give you a long service life.