Tissot RockWatch 2025: Granite Never Looked So Cool
Swiss watch brands love playing it safe. Tissot? Not so much. In 2025, they’ve revived the RockWatch — yes, the one made out of actual stone. It’s quirky, it’s cool, and it proves that sometimes the best ideas are the ones carved in granite.

I’ve always admired how Tissot doesn’t just play safe in the Swiss watch sandbox. They’ve been pulling off “what if” experiments for decades. Case in point:
- In 1969, they put fiberglass on a wrist when everyone else was still polishing steel.
- In 1971, they went full sci-fi with the Idea 2001 — the world’s first plastic mechanical watch. (Imagine a Swatch prototype before Swatch existed.)
- And in 1985, they casually dropped a watch carved out of granite. Yep, granite — the kind of stuff you trip over on a mountain hike.
Fast forward to 2025, and that crazy idea is back. The Tissot RockWatch has returned, and I can’t help but smile.

Rock Solid History, With a Twist
Back in the ’80s, the RockWatch was nicknamed the “Stone Age Swatch.” It was weird, it was wonderful, and it got people talking. Making a case out of stone wasn’t just a gimmick — it required insane engineering. Imagine hollowing out a block of granite with micron precision so it doesn’t crumble in your hands. That’s not a weekend DIY project — that’s Swiss stubbornness and genius combined.
Today’s RockWatch is cut from granite sourced from the Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps — which already makes it cooler than your average limited edition. It’s like carrying a little piece of the mountain on your wrist. And because no two slabs of granite are the same, no two RockWatches are either. Every dial tells its own geological story.

My Take: Why I’m Into It
This isn’t just a throwback for collectors — it’s Tissot winking at the industry and saying, “See? We’ve been daring all along.”
- The case is a neat 38mm, which feels modern and wearable.
- The domed sapphire crystal makes it more durable than the original ’85 version.
- Inside is a Swiss quartz movement — yes, purists will roll their eyes, but it’s fitting. Quartz is reliable, low-maintenance, and lets the stone do all the talking.
- It’s limited to 999 pieces — which means blink and it’s gone.
- The price? Around $1,225 / ₹1,04,500 (approx). Honestly, for a Swiss watch carved out of actual granite, that’s… pretty solid.

Would I wear it daily? Maybe not. But as a conversation starter, it’s unbeatable. Imagine someone asking what’s on your wrist and you say, “Oh, just a piece of the Alps.” That’s a flex no "hyped" watch can match. The new RockWatch isn’t about blending in — it’s about celebrating the oddballs, the risk-takers, the watchmakers who looked at a mountain and thought: “Yeah, let’s turn that into a watch.”