How to Read Infantry's New Arrivals — A Buyer's Guide to What's Just Dropped
Every Infantry release lands on this page in reverse-chronological order — newest at the top. That ordering matters: it's how working aviators, field operators, and watch enthusiasts spot the next platform upgrade before it hits the broader market. This guide explains how to evaluate a brand-new release without falling for novelty bias.
Decode the Release Type Before the Aesthetic
Infantry's new arrivals fall into three architectures. Launch editions are the first production runs of new platforms — the AeroChron Neo translucent flyback chronograph is the current example, building on the Revolution-series 47mm square case.
Limited & anniversary editions are numbered runs tied to IP partnerships — the Transformers 40th Anniversary Modular Mechanical and Transformers Power of Dragon ride Infantry's Modular case platform; the Robotech 40th tribute uses the same Modular chassis.
Standard rolling collab drops — One Piece Lite, Peanuts Prime, Snoopy editions, Crayon Shinchan, Care Bears, Bounce, Kamen Rider Digital — sit on their own dedicated case platforms designed for the IP, not on the core tactical chassis.
Each release is engineered for what it's meant to do: the tactical line for field use, the IP collab for licensed character expression.
Why a New Release Doesn't Mean a Compromised Spec — Or an Overclaimed One
Each release inherits the spec floor of its parent series — not a universal cross-catalog floor.
A new Diver release lands with 200-metre water resistance, sapphire crystal, Japanese movement, and Swiss Super-LumiNova.
A new Aviateur or Modular release lands with 100-metre water resistance and sapphire crystal.
A new Revolution release lands with 100-metre water resistance baseline; sapphire and movement origin vary by SKU — check each Revolution variant's spec sheet.
A new IP collab release is engineered as a licensed character watch — the dial, the artwork, the blind-box mechanic are the product.
Read the series before the launch hype and you'll know exactly what's new and what's inherited.
Anniversary Editions, Numbered Runs, and Why Timing Matters
40th anniversary editions are not restocked once the production run closes. The Transformers 40th Anniversary Modular Mechanical and Robotech 40th Anniversary Tribute were built to mark specific IP milestones — once the numbered count is gone, the platform retires from the catalog. If you're tracking a specific collab drop, the New Arrivals page is the only canonical source: it's updated on the same day a SKU goes live in Hong Kong inventory.
Blind Box vs Full Set vs Premium Set — How the Collab Buying Mechanic Works
Most new IP collabs ship in three formats. A Blind Box is a single watch with a randomized character — the lottery-style fan UX, lowest entry price, ideal if you want the surprise.
A Full Set guarantees every character in the lineup (6pcs, 9pcs, or 12pcs, depending on the IP), best for collectors.
Premium Set formats are the launch-edition tiers — the Kamen Rider Premium Set ($180) is this category's current flagship.
Every collab edition is officially licensed through the IP rights holder and ships with the standard 12-month manufacturer warranty, identical to the tactical core line. The licensing and the warranty are constants; the spec details are series-specific.
First-production-run anxiety is real.
Buyers worry that a brand-new platform hasn't been wrist-tested long enough to trust. Infantry's answer is structural: every new release inherits the case, crystal, gasket, and movement architecture of its parent series — a new Diver release inherits the 200M-tested chassis; a new Aviateur or Modular release inherits the 100M-tested chassis; a new Revolution release inherits the Revolution chassis it's variant-of. The novelty is in the dial, the colourway, the IP overlay — never in untested load-bearing engineering.
Pick from the new arrivals above by matching series to use case: Diver for water work, Aviateur or Modular for cockpit-style daily carry, Revolution for the workhorse rotation, IP collab for licensed character expression.




































