Featured Hands-On Nomos Watch talk

Hands-On: NOMOS Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer
A Worldtimer You’ll Actually Wear

Nomos brings something new to the table in 2025 with the Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer, a surprisingly slim, wearable travel watch that packs serious functionality into a compact case. In this hands-on video review, I take a close look at the new Club Sport Worldtimer: how it wears, how it works, and why it might just be the sleeper hit of the year for GMTGMT A GMT (Greenwich Mean Time) complication is a feature found in some watches that allows the wearer to track two time zones simultaneously. It typically includes a 24-hour hand and a bezel or a second hour hand that can be adjusted independently of the main hour hand to track the time in a different time zone. [Learn More] fans and Nomos collectors alike.

Note: While the Dune dial is lovely, there are many more dial variations available at present. So, the real focus here is the overall execution, a sub-10mm case, in-house movement, and a practical world timeWorld Time Complication A world timer is a complication that displays the time in multiple time zones simultaneously. It typically includes a rotating bezel or a dial with city names or time zones printed on it and a 24-hour hand or a subdial that can be adjusted to indicate the time in a different time zone. The user can rotate the bezel or use the crown to align the city or time zone they want to read with the current time on the watch's main dial, it allows the user to know the time in different time zones at a glance. Some world timers have a day/night indicator which helps to know if the time shown is during the day or night at the selected time zone. [Learn More] function with subtle German design flair.

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