The past decade has seen a massive uptick in the number of new watch brands hitting the market. Whether considered boutique brands or microbrands, these independent watchmakers mostly compete on the more affordable side of the spectrum, offering up compelling designs and impressive specs for $1,000 or less. But a handful of this new crop of brands have taken a much bigger swing, pricing their watches above $5,000 and taking aim squarely at the industry’s well-established luxury market.
Entering such a competitive product space as luxury goods is never easy, but it can be especially difficult when it comes to watches. Tradition plays a huge role in the luxury side of the business, with the most distinguished brands laying claim to literal centuries’ worth of history and utilizing techniques and technology that are just as old. So if you’re a new luxury watch brand looking to break through and get people to notice you, you’ve got to do things a bit differently. And that’s what Norqain promises.
The brand debuted just in 2018, but with an impressive pedigree that allowed it to gain a foothold quite quickly. It’s an actual Swiss brand, based in Biel/Bienne, making it a neighbor of Omega. Its CEO and founder, Ben Küffer, is an industry veteran with a decade of experience at Breitling whose father serves as the Swiss Watch Industry Association’s Chairman of the Board. Co-founder Ted Schneider is the son of former Breitling owner and CEO Theodore Schneider. Then there’s brand advisor Jean-Claude Biver, a watch industry legend who is credited with turning around the fortunes of such brands as Blancpain, Omega, Hublot and TAG Heuer over the course of four decades.
To discover if this upstart brand is really worth Tudor money, I spent several weeks wearing the Wild One. A lightweight luxury sports watch with a unique design made from a proprietary case material and housing a manufacture movement, the watch — the first from the brand to be designed in collaboration with Biver — felt like the most “Norqain” watch available. Here are my impressions.
Norqain Wild One: What We Think
I admittedly was skeptical of Norqain. There’s always the temptation to quickly dismiss a watch at this price from an unknown brand in favor of swimming in the more familiar waters of brands like Tudor and Breitling. But I realize now how mistaken that thought process is. The Wild One is fantastic. It offers something differing by looking and feeling like nothing else on the market, and yet it still manages to offer the premium feel one associates with luxury watches.
It’s incredibly lightweight and comfortable, and the manufacture movement is every bit as good as one you’d get in one of those aforementioned brands (which makes sense, considering they all use movements from the same factory in Kenissi). The design is a bit muddled — there’s a lot going on — but overall, this is a rugged, unique and downright cool sports watch that gives big brand competitors a run for their money.