
Grand Seiko Just Revolutionized Watch Accuracy. Again
The new Spring Drive UFA movement sets a new industry standard for precision.
The new Spring Drive UFA movement sets a new industry standard for precision.
After years of hype and scorn on the vintage market, TAG Heuer revives the original Formula 1 line with much-improved specs.
The lightest mechanical dive watch ever is also rugged as hell.
Baltic, the official timekeeper of Tour Auto 2025, designed a new chronograph steeped in racing heritage and powered by an impressive Swiss movement.
The new Waterbury Heritage Chronograph, modeled after 1970s racing watches like the Rolex Daytona and Heuer Autavia, is available in two colors and is perfectly sized.
The only question is — which new Norqain Independence Skeleton Chrono 42mm will you choose?
Presented By Norqain
Who says minimalism has to be boring?
The watch industry never stops ticking. Keep time with the most exciting new releases.
By Johnny Brayson, Brad Lanphear, Jack Seemer, and Sean Tirman
A hands-on review of Nivada's new meca-quartz powered Chronosport, a retro chronograph that laps the sub-$1,000 competition.
It looks like Rolex is finally jumping on the watch industry's biggest bandwagon.
With its newest release, Fleux perfectly balances dive watch utilitarianism and dress watch minimalism in a classical design language.
It's one of the few sports watches actually designed for sports.
Doxa reintroduced a GMT complication to its lineup of professional-grade dive watches, modeled after a fan-favorite line from 2006.
It's probably not going to stay hidden much longer.
This once-divisive, now-iconic dive watch gets a sunken treasure-worthy upgrade courtesy of another noteworthy Japanese brand.
By Sean Tirman
Hey, wave dial brother.
The new Top Time is a compact three-hander with some familiar design cues.
Swiss watchmaker Fortis made the chronograph worn by Russian Cosmonauts even tougher using titanium and ceramic.
HTD, a watchmaking startup from Florence, translated the design language from 1970s racing chronographs into a timeless everyday watch.
A 120-year-old, family-owned Swiss watch company has placed the crown at 6 o'clock on its dive watches since 1958. Why hasn't it caught on?