
Casio designer Kikuo Ibe created the first G-SHOCK, the DW-5000C, in 1983 with the goals of 10-year battery life, a water resistance of 10 bar and the ability to survive a 10-meter fall. Apparently underwhelmed by the watch’s ruggedness, in 1985 the G-SHOCK team created the DW-5500C, an updated version with a “mud-resistant construction,” appropriately nicknamed the “Mudman.” In 1993, Casio released the Frogman — a watch made for divers, with an ISO-certified 200-meter depth rating. This sparked the “MASTER of G” line, with various other ultra-tough G-SHOCK tool watches to follow throughout the ’90s and onward.
Aside from their durability, MASTER of G watches display Casio’s incredible ability to engineer many features into a wrist watch. The G-SHOCK RISEMAN was capable of measuring ambient temperature and atmospheric pressure, allowing it to serve as a barometer and altimeter for those who worked and played at high altitudes. The ANTMAN was the first G-SHOCK to be fitted with atomic clock signal receptors. The FISHERMAN had a tide graph. The list goes on: more than a dozen MASTER of G watches have come and gone since the product line’s launch. Today, Casio continues the engineering legacy of the MASTER of G line with three new sub-models invoking the Air, Land and Sea.
MUDMASTER “ON THE LAND”
GG1000-1A3 & GWG1000-1A3