URWERK builds watches that cost as much as a compact car. The Geneva-based studio has spent decades engineering satellite hour complications, where orbiting arms carry hour numerals into position around a central axis, revealing the current hour as they complete their circuit. It is horological theater at its most sophisticated, with collectors typically paying between $30,000 and $100,000 depending on the configuration. The wandering hour concept itself dates to 17th-century pocket watches, but URWERK transformed it into an entire brand identity that has spent the better part of three decades sitting behind a velvet rope. The visual language of satellite hours has remained firmly in luxury territory for nearly all of that time.
Mitico, a Hong Kong-based brand, just launched the PhantomX on Kickstarter at $399. It runs a four-arm satellite wandering hour system over a Miyota 9039 automatic, wrapped in a stainless tonneau case with a 3D star wheel mechanism that reveals only the current hour at any given moment. The campaign cleared 1,400% of its funding goal within days of going live. Something is clearly happening in independent horology right now, and the PhantomX is one of the most direct examples yet of the satellite hour complication finally escaping the velvet ropes. The gap between ambition and accessibility, in this category, is narrowing fast.
Designer: Mitico
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The wandering hour format has existed in some form since the 17th century, and Mitico’s interpretation adds a structural layer that separates the PhantomX from the current wave of indie satellite designs. Four arms orbit continuously around a central axis, each carrying three hour numerals on a sculpted 3D star wheel, with only the current hour numeral vertically aligned and fully visible at the dial center. Mitico calls this the “Only the Present Hour Revealed” concept, meaning the adjacent numerals stay tucked along the curved sides of the wheel, keeping the face uncluttered despite the mechanical complexity underneath. Time is read by finding the arm that has rotated into the central display position, then cross-referencing it against the clockwise 0-to-60 minute track. The result is a reading experience that demands a moment of engagement rather than a reflex glance.
A red triangular seconds hand sweeps steadily across the dial, acting as both a navigational beacon and a metronome for the entire orbital system. It gives the eye something to follow inside a display that is otherwise in constant, multidirectional motion, and the contrast between its singular sweep and the orbiting arms creates a layering effect that rewards watching rather than just checking. The dial center is sculpted with layered textures rather than left flat, adding mechanical depth that reveals itself at close range. Mitico applies high-intensity Swiss Super-LumiNova to the central time display, covering the rotating seconds, minute track, and hour indicators, for clear legibility in the dark. The upper inner dial ring gets standard-grade lume, providing a faint structural outline at night without competing with the primary display.
The tonneau-shaped stainless steel case measures 50.64mm wide by 43.32mm tall, with a case thickness of 15mm, dimensions that put this squarely in bold-statement territory. The skeletonized side architecture is machined to reduce visual bulk and overall weight while preserving structural rigidity, with every cutout doing double duty as both aesthetic element and structural support. Crown placement at 12 o’clock reduces wrist pressure during wear and allows more natural operation, one of those ergonomic decisions that sounds minor until you actually live with a conventionally crowned watch all day. A double anti-reflective sapphire crystal with a Mohs hardness of 9 sits over the dial, ensuring clarity from any angle. Water resistance is rated at 5 ATM.
The Miyota 9039 is a self-winding caliber running at 28,800 vibrations per hour with a 36-hour power reserve, and it is the right movement for a project at this price point. Miyota calibers in this family carry an established track record across the microbrand world, offering day-to-day reliability that lets a complex display module run on top without stress-testing the foundation. The 9039 carries no date complication, which is the correct call, because a date window would introduce visual noise into a dial already managing considerable simultaneous motion. Choosing a proven base over an untested proprietary caliber is the pragmatic engineering decision that separates a deliverable product from a concept. That the four-arm satellite module delivers stable, legible display on top of this foundation is the understated technical achievement at the center of the PhantomX.
The PhantomX arrives in ten colorways: Phantom Black, Arctic White, Solar Yellow, Stellar Blue, Nebula Green, Mars Orange, Flare Red, Abyss Blue, Orbital Brown, and Nova Purple, each carrying matching strap stitching and crown accent treatment across the same stainless case and movement platform. The strap is a nylon and genuine leather hybrid fitted with quick-release spring bars, so swapping requires no tools. Mitico estimates shipping to backers in August 2026, with the campaign running through June 13. At $399, the PhantomX is making the satellite hour complication accessible at a price point that no established watchmaker has approached at this level of mechanical ambition.
Click Here to Buy Now: $429 $750 (43% off) Hurry! Only 12 days left.







