No. FVN is a network of clubs dedicated to training, discipline, and building community. While members may be politically active, FVN itself is not a registered political organization.
No. FVN is not a religious organization. Members may hold personal beliefs, but clubs do not promote or debate religion.
Yes. You must be 18 or older to take part in club activities.
“Folkish” simply means rooted in the folk — our people, our heritage, our shared blood and culture. It is a reminder that identity is more than an idea; it is lived, inherited, and carried forward.
Fill out the application form on the Join page. From there, you’ll go through our vetting process, which includes an interview. If accepted, you’ll be placed with a club and begin training as a member of the network.
If no club exists nearby, we’ll work with you to get one started. With our guidance, you and others in your area can organize locally and establish a club under the Folkish Vanguard Network.
We wear masks to protect our members and their families. In an age where far-left extremists openly target nationalists, anonymity is a safeguard against harassment and violence. The rise of left-wing political violence makes it necessary for men to train and organize without exposing themselves or their loved ones to danger.
No. Many members start as beginners. Discipline and commitment matter more than prior experience.
Each club chooses the combat sports it focuses on — most train in boxing, wrestling, MMA, or Brazilian jiu-jitsu. The goal is practical skill, not ceremony.
No. Fighting is one part of training. FVN is about discipline, fitness, brotherhood, and building men who are strong in body and spirit.
The helm is a symbol of our Anglo-Saxon forebears — kings and warriors who built our civilization. It reminds us who we are and what we carry forward.
The red and white stripes recall the rebellion of the colonies and the spirit of resistance. They are a banner of loyalty to our people and defiance against decay.
Clubs are locally run but connected through the Vanguard Network. Each maintains its own leadership while sharing in the same standards of discipline and loyalty.
No. We are not a militia and do not engage in paramilitary activity. FVN is a nonviolent network of clubs focused on combat sports, training, and discipline.
Fill out the application form.
Download Telegram and create a user, adjust your privacy settings to conceal any personal information such as your real name and phone number.
When you finish the application, please allow up to 72 hours for a response.
Once you receive a response, you will be allowed to proceed forward with our vetting process.
The Folkish Vanguard Network is building regional MMA clubs rooted in strength, discipline, and heritage. Each club is a circle of men training side by side in combat sports, forging skill, resilience, and trust. Together they form a living network — a vanguard of our people rising across the nation.
Don’t see a club near you?
The Folkish Vanguard Network (FVN) is a brotherhood of clubs, a living network of men bound together by discipline, training, and heritage. We are not an abstract idea, nor an online community of voices without action. We are flesh and blood, rooted in our towns and cities, meeting face to face, training side by side.
We exist because our nation demands it. In a world where chaos and political violence are rising, where Antifa and other far-left extremists have become a growing terroristic threat, our people cannot afford to remain idle. Discipline and training are no longer luxuries — they are necessities. A free nation is not preserved by comfort but by courage. If we are to endure, we must be strong, disciplined, and prepared to defend ourselves, our families, and our folk.
We are heirs to a living tradition. Our nation was not gifted to us but won through blood and resolve, preserved by men who would not bow. To be part of FVN is to shoulder that same duty — to stand as the vanguard of our people, bound by blood, disciplined in strength, and resolved to secure a future worthy of our folk and our heritage. We are Folkish Nationalists, and the Vanguard Network is our banner in action — a living arm of the Folkish Movement.
A people without symbols is a people without memory. The standards we raise are not decoration; they are banners of identity, unity, and defiance. They remind us of who we are, where we come from, and what we are called to preserve.
To stand beneath these flags is to accept a duty. They are not relics for museums, but living marks of a people who endure. Each banner declares to the world — and to ourselves — that our folk is not finished, our story not ended, our spirit not broken.
The strength of the FVN lies in its clubs — families of discipline, forged in loyalty and sharpened in struggle. Each club is more than a gathering of men; it is a circle of trust where character is tested, skills are built, and bonds are unbreakable.
From these clubs rises a greater whole. Across towns, states, and regions, they join together as a single network — a family of families, a vanguard of men who will not surrender their heritage. Here, bonds are forged that outlast hardship, and loyalty is given that cannot be bought
Our clubs are the proving grounds of this strength. Each man who joins accepts the burden of responsibility — to himself, to his club, and to his people. Together, we form a vanguard: a forward line of men prepared to meet the trials of our age with courage and resolve.
The banner of the FVN bears the image of the Sutton Hoo helm upon a field of red. This symbol is no accident. It is the face of our ancestors — the warriors and kings of the Anglo-Saxon folk, whose courage and discipline carved the foundations of our civilization.
The helm is a reminder that our people are not a relic confined to the pages of history. We are a living race, descended from men who took up sword and shield to defend their kin and their land. To march beneath this banner is to claim that inheritance, to accept the call to struggle, sacrifice, and triumph.
The red field is the blood of our people — shed in ages past and yet to come — binding us as one folk across generations. Together, the helm and the field proclaim a truth the modern world seeks to erase: we are Anglo-Saxons, heirs to a heritage that endures, and a people destined to rise again.
The striped banner of the FVN carries nine red and white lines, recalling the rebellion of the original colonies and the spirit of a nation born in struggle. Inspired by the flags flown in defiance of tyranny, it stands as a symbol of resistance and self-determination.
These stripes remind us that our people did not inherit a world freely given. From the battles of the frontier that tested the mettle of our race to the founding of nations, our ancestors forged their future through struggle. The red stripes speak to sacrifice; the white, to the enduring spirit of our folk.
This banner is our declaration: we are a nation within a nation, loyal not to a decaying state but to our own kind, our own heritage, and our own future. What was once built in rebellion must be preserved with the same spirit.