Tick Drop – Watch everything

Tick Drop

Watches are more than time. They're culture, obsession, status, and stories – compressed into something you wear on your wrist. Tick Drop is the podcast that covers the world of watches without the gatekeeping. Every week we bring you new releases and collabs worth knowing, the cultural stories behind the most iconic watches ever made, and brand deep-dives that tell you everything you need before you buy. From the Rolex Submariner on James Bond's wrist to the IWC Ingenieur designed by Brad Pitt for F1 – we find the stories that make watches matter beyond the dial. Whether you're eyeing your first serious watch, already deep in the hobby, or just fascinated by the culture of the wrist – this show is for you. New episodes every week. Watch everything.

  1. The Rebels of Geneva – W&W 2026's Best Independent Brands

    Apr 23

    The Rebels of Geneva – W&W 2026's Best Independent Brands

    While everyone was watching Rolex skip the Coke and Audemars Piguet bring a peacock — a group of independent and under-the-radar brands quietly delivered some of the most extraordinary watches of the week. Almost nobody noticed. H. Moser & Cie. replaced the crown with a Reebok Pump button. Press it to wind the watch. Each press adds an hour of power reserve. The case is forged quartz fibre — no two look identical. It comes with a matching pair of Reebok sneakers in the box. $39,900. This is the same brand that made a watch from Swiss cheese to protest the Swiss Made label. Moser has always been watchmaking's great provocateur — and the Pump is their most outrageous move yet. Parmigiani celebrated their 30th anniversary with a world first. At rest — a perfect three-hand watch. Press the pusher. Five hands unfold across the entire dial simultaneously. The chronograph appears from nowhere. Press again to stop. Third press — every hand realigns and vanishes. 362 components. Four years of development. The philosophy of the invisible complication. Tudor marked 100 years with the Monarch — a forgotten model name revived with a faceted case unlike anything in their current collection, California dial, and the best movement finishing Tudor has ever shown. COSC and METAS certified. $5,875. IWC built a watch from scratch for human spaceflight. No crown. All functions via bezel. Certified for Haven-1 — the world's first commercial space station. Built for astronauts in pressurized gloves. And A. Lange & Söhne brought the most refined watch nobody talked about — 36mm, 9.8mm thin, annual calendar, moonphase accurate to one day in 122.6 years. The rebels won Geneva. Find the full episode at tick-drop.com – Watch everything.

    17 min
  2. The Most Important Watch Week in History – Watches & Wonders 2026 Preview

    Apr 9

    The Most Important Watch Week in History – Watches & Wonders 2026 Preview

    On April 14, 2026, something happens that has never happened before. Patek Philippe. Audemars Piguet. Vacheron Constantin. The Holy Trinity of Swiss watchmaking — all presenting under the same roof simultaneously, for the first time in history. And Rolex is there too. But that's just the beginning. One man designed two of the most important watches ever made. Gérald Genta sketched the Royal Oak on a paper napkin in 1970. Six years later he did it again with the Nautilus. This week in Geneva, both watches celebrate landmark anniversaries at the same fair. Audemars Piguet returns after six years away. Patek Philippe marks 50 years of the most coveted watch on earth. One designer. Two icons. One extraordinary week. Meanwhile Rolex is rewriting its own history. The Pepsi is gone. A patent filed in 2022 points to exactly what comes next — the Coke. Red and black ceramic. The most anticipated Rolex release in years. The Milgauss turns 70, discontinued in 2023, now rumoured to return thinner and more capable than ever. And 2026 marks 100 years since the Oyster case — the world's first waterproof wristwatch. This is not a normal Watches & Wonders. This is the most important watch week in a generation. In this episode we break down every story worth knowing — what to expect, what it means for collectors, and why April 14 is the date every watch lover has circled on their calendar. Find the full story at tick-drop.com – Watch everything.

    19 min
  3. Hidden Figures – The Secret Easter Eggs of the Watch World

    Apr 2

    Hidden Figures – The Secret Easter Eggs of the Watch World

    Every great watch has a story. But some of the best stories are the ones you can't see. Rolex etches a tiny crown into the sapphire crystal at 6 o'clock — invisible to the naked eye, only revealed at the right angle under the right light. It's been there since 2001 and most people who own a Rolex have never noticed it. Blancpain hides the initials of its founder Jehan-Jacques Blancpain on grand feu enamel dials — between the 4 and 5, or the 7 and 8 — only visible when light catches the dial obliquely. Omega built a secret Snoopy into the Speedmaster Silver Snoopy Award — invisible until you flip the watch over, run the chronograph, and watch a tiny astronaut float across the Moon on the caseback. These are horological Easter eggs. Hidden details, secret signatures, miniature animations and invisible complications placed there by watchmakers who wanted to reward the people who look closely enough. In this special Easter episode we go deep on the best hidden features in watchmaking. The anti-counterfeiting details that became collector obsessions. The UV-activated surprises that only reveal themselves in total darkness. The complications disguised as simple time-only displays. And the secret signatures that watchmakers have been hiding in their work since Abraham-Louis Breguet first signed his dials in the 18th century. This is the episode for everyone who has ever looked at a great watch and wondered — what am I missing? Find the full story at tick-drop.com – Watch everything.

    18 min

About

Watches are more than time. They're culture, obsession, status, and stories – compressed into something you wear on your wrist. Tick Drop is the podcast that covers the world of watches without the gatekeeping. Every week we bring you new releases and collabs worth knowing, the cultural stories behind the most iconic watches ever made, and brand deep-dives that tell you everything you need before you buy. From the Rolex Submariner on James Bond's wrist to the IWC Ingenieur designed by Brad Pitt for F1 – we find the stories that make watches matter beyond the dial. Whether you're eyeing your first serious watch, already deep in the hobby, or just fascinated by the culture of the wrist – this show is for you. New episodes every week. Watch everything.

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