Nomos Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer: The Reverie and Roam Editions

Nomos Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer: The Reverie and Roam Editions made their debute to impress us one more time before the year is over

Daniel Razvan
7 Min Read
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Nomos Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer: The Reverie and Roam Editions made their debute to impress us one more time before the year is over

Nomos Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer became one of my favourite watches from this year, and instantly entered my wanted list. It was a great year for the brand and model with Nomination for GPHG award in 2025 

The model was introduced in April with six limited editions, then they released the Night Navigation series in September. 

The design for these models is excellent, fresh and an instant hit amongst collectors. 

Nomos Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer: The Reverie and Roam Editions color Language

With new models that they launched the color approach became a little more sophisticated. Both of them share a champagne sunburst dial. 

The Reverie has warm and earthy tones (yellow,sand and wine red) while the Roam, comes with light blue, sand and green colors with a little touch of orange. 

I feel like it’s sportier and has some maritime inspired palette that is perfect for a traveler. 

The Night Navigation series came with darker tones that gave the watch more tactical aesthetics. Kind of reminds me of the Doxa Sub 300 Dubai Watch Week edition. But just color wise.

The design choice for both Reverie and Roam, with champagne dial, gives the watch some breathing room allowing the functional complexity to remain legible without cluttering the dial. 

Nomos Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer: The Reverie and Roam Editions are dressy enough for a business meeting and sporty enough for adventure as well. 

Compact Package and technical excellence

The specifications haven’t changed since the first release in April 2025. And that is not a bad thing, because they got the fundamentals right in the first place. 

The case comes in 40 mm stainless steel, it has a thickness of just 9.9 mm, which is impressive and a true achievement for a watch that is housing a complete worldtime complication. 

Water resistance is 100 meters and this depth was achieved due to the screw down crown which has a red warning ring that alerts you in case that you forgot the crown opened. Which is a nice touch. Omega Seamaster Professional 300m  doesn’t have this and I think it’s needed. 

The worldtime function itself is very elegantly executed. It has a rotating city disc at the dial’s periphery which displays 24 major cities (they have the three letter IATA airport codes) which corresponds to 24 time zones. 

A yellow bar or an orange bar, depending on the model, appears beneath the selected city at the 12 o’clock position.  The fixed minute track has plus and minus indicators which allows you to quickly reference times around the globe. 

At 2 o’clock position Nomos Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer: The Reverie and Roam Editions comes with a pusher that once you press it advance both the city ring and the central hour hand in one hour increments. Simple, easy, satisfying and intuitive to use. 

The home time is thoughtfully designed, displayed in a sub-dial at 3 o’clock which shows 24 hour scale with day/night indication. 

Of course it has Super-Luminova for legibility in low light conditions.

In house Movement

This is something each watch collector likes to hear. I guess.  Nomos Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer: The Reverie and Roam Editions are powered by the Nomos Caliber DUW 3202, a in-house automatic movement with integrated worldtime complication. 

DUW 3202 has only 4mm in thickness and it is an example of German engineering. The 31 mm in diameter houses 37 jewels  and it operates at 21,600 vph. It has the Nomos proprietary swing system featuring a blue balance spring. 

The movement has only 42 hours of power reserve. I say only because my opinion is that all watches should have at least 60 hours. But that’s me. 

One thing to mention is that Nomos Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer: The Reverie and Roam Editions come with premium Horween Genuine Shell Cordovan leather straps. Brown for the Reverie and black for the Roam. 

This is a first, usually the watches from the Club Sport Neomatik worldtimer family came with textile or steel bracelets. 

Price 

Nomos Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer: The Reverie and Roam Editions has a price tag of $5190 and it’s a little high if you ask me. 

Longines Pirit Zulu time (which I own) can be bought for approximately $3.400 or even a Tudor Black Bay GMT which retail at $4.400. Both of these models came at a lower price, but with more background and history. 

Yes Nomos Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer: The Reverie and Roam Editions are limited editions, 175 pieces for each,  but I still think that they should position themselves a little lower on the market with their price and will be an instant HIT!

Specifications:

  • Reference: 790.S11 (Reverie), 790.S10 (Roam)
  • Case: 40mm × 9.9mm, stainless steel, 100m water resistance
  • Movement: Nomos caliber DUW 3202, automatic, 42-hour power reserve
  • Functions: Hours, minutes, small seconds, worldtime via rotating city disc, home time 24-hour sub-dial
  • Dial: Champagne with sunburst finish; Reverie features yellow, sand, and wine red accents; Roam features light blue, green, and sand accents
  • Strap: 20mm Horween Genuine Shell Cordovan leather (brown for Reverie, black for Roam)
  • Price: $5,190

Availability: Limited to 175 pieces each

More info on Nomos official website

TAGGED:
My passion for watches began around the age of 6 when I first saw a watch that seemed magical to me. It had 7 melodies, an alarm, a stopwatch, and would beep every hour. Truly advanced technology for me at the time! It belonged to my brother, but before long, he gave it to me. One of the melodies was “Oh! Susanna” by Stephen Foster, but unfortunately, I no longer remember the other six. If I had to guess, I’d say it was a Casio, as they popularized melody watches. However, the truth is I don’t remember exactly. It certainly wasn’t a Casio—most likely a cheap Chinese knockoff—but it was fascinating for a kid like me. That watch is no longer part of my life—just like many other watches that have been lost over time, without me even realizing when or how. As I write these lines, a photo from my first grade comes to mind. In it, I’m wearing a watch that’s clearly visible. Still, I don’t think it’s the melody watch I remember. On the watch in the photo, I had stuck two flags cut out from an atlas. Besides my passion for watches, I also had a fascination with maps. What can I say? Childhood quirks and passions of a kid who grew up without the internet—because it didn’t exist! Otherwise, I’ve always been told I have a talent for writing, probably because I’m not good at math at all.
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