
Looking at the Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer is one thing—but holding it is another. At a glance, it’s apparent that this is a sporty integrated bracelet watch. Stainless steel case and bracelet? Check. Angular pushers framing the case? Check. A dial dense with information? Check. All the usual suspects are there. But it’s what happens when it lands on your wrist that you notice something different.
Like 9.9mm thin. This svelte profile gives it a low-to-the-ground wear that rests flush against your wrist comfortably—no matter if you’re suiting up for a boardroom meeting or clocking in your 2.4. It’s also worth noting that the bracelet sports a deployant clasp with quick-release spring bars—so if you’re in a sentimental mood, you can swap in a leather or velvet strap if you so please.
Inside beats the in-house DUW 3202 automatic movement, offering 100 metres of water resistance and a 42-hour power reserve—credentials that reinforce its sporting capabilities. This powers the watch’s dual-time function—easily one of the most user-friendly on the market.

A small seconds sub dial sits at 6 o’clock, while a 24-hour display at 3 lets you track time across zones that may or may not matter to you—until they do. 24 different time zones are denoted with city codes in the blue outer ring of the dial, which is essentially a travel manual disguised as design.
Press the pusher at 2 o’clock. The hour hand jumps forward by one. The city disk rotates counterclockwise. The minutes and seconds don’t budge, so your accuracy stays intact. Whichever city is sitting pretty at 12 o’clock? That’s your current time zone. Flying from London to Athens, for example, just means you have to press the pusher twice. It’s as simple, and satisfying, as that. Alternatively, you could always adjust the time manually through the crown, but where’s the fun in that?

Fresh from its debut at Watches and Wonders Geneva, the Worldtimer comes in sober silver and deep blue sunburst dials. But if you’re feeling whimsical, six limited-edition colourways—just 175 pieces each—bring a splash of playful vibrancy to the otherwise stoic design. It’s rare to see a sporty watch swing this wide on the colour wheel. But then again, it takes a certain degree of confidence, the quiet and self-assured kind, to be serious and a little eccentric. And Nomos has exactly that.