UNIMATIC x Rocky Mountain Watches — Modello Due Toolwatch Limited Edition (pre-order)
Only 100 individually numbered pieces exist: this UNIMATIC x Rocky Mountain Watches field watch, at $849, is already one of the most covetable limited editions of 2026.

A hundred watches. That is the entire production run of the Modello Due UT2-NST, the collaboration between Milan's UNIMATIC and Colorado-based retailer Rocky Mountain Watches, currently open for pre-order at $849 with shipping expected in summer 2026.
The UT2-NST was engineered around the 2026 Natural Selection global tour, an extreme sports series spanning MTB racing in New Zealand, snowboarding in Revelstoke, backcountry skiing in Alaska, and surf across South Africa, Australia, and Indonesia from February through July. That globe-crossing itinerary shaped both the construction brief and the watch's five-strap color kit: White, Cool Grey, Alpine Blue, and International Orange each echo the terrain and discipline of a different tour stop.
The case is 38mm sandblasted 316L stainless steel, wrapped in a 360-degree TPU anti-shock system, the same proprietary protection architecture UNIMATIC deploys across its Toolwatch series, which meets MIL-STD-810H standards. Inside sits a Seiko VH31A quartz caliber, chosen specifically for its smoothly sweeping seconds hand and its tolerance for heavy impact. Water resistance runs to 300m (1,000ft), and a 2.7mm double-domed anti-reflective sapphire crystal covers a matte black dial with Super-LumiNova GL C1 markers. Everything about the execution prioritizes legibility: this watch was designed to be read at a glance from an Alaskan ridgeline or beneath a Pacific swell.
At $849, the UT2-NST occupies a precise gap in the market. It sits well below the $1,200-plus entry point of most Swiss-made limited-edition field watches while delivering construction credentials that comfortably exceed its price. The quartz movement, sometimes a point of contention among collectors, is a deliberate engineering decision rather than a cost compromise. The VH31A's anti-shock tolerance outperforms most automatics under the physical demands of extreme sport, and its sweeping seconds hand erases any visual distinction from a mechanical caliber at a glance.

UNIMATIC was founded in Milan by Giovanni Moro and Simone Nunziato, industrial design graduates of the Politecnico di Milano, and the brand's philosophy of strict numerical limits has made each new collaboration a reliable sell-out. Rocky Mountain Watches has been among UNIMATIC's most consistent North American retail partners, having previously co-released the Modello Due ref. U2-RA, also capped at 100 individually numbered pieces.
As a gift, the UT2-NST is a rare combination: specific enough to signal genuine research on the giver's part, scarce enough to carry real long-term collector interest, and priced below the threshold that makes a watch feel financially reckless. The five included nylon straps add immediate versatility without requiring any additional spend. At 100 pieces, UNIMATIC's track record with Rocky Mountain Watches makes the outcome fairly predictable: earlier shared releases sold through before they arrived, and the UT2-NST is positioned to follow the same arc.
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