Citizen's limited Attesa Satellite Wave GPS watch jumped its July launch window and is now selling for $2,195 in the US and £1,595 in the UK. The all-black DLC titanium build, three-second GPS sync, and recrystallized titanium finish make it one of the more technically loaded solar watches you can strap on right now.

Citizen quietly pushed its newest limited-edition Attesa to market ahead of schedule. The Attesa CC4107-80H Satellite Wave GPS watch was supposed to go on sale globally in July, but it has already surfaced for purchase in two of Citizen's largest markets. Buyers in the US can grab it now for $2,195, and the UK listing has it at £1,595. Japan still has to wait until July 2nd, where it carries a ¥385,000 price tag. Production is capped at 1,800 units worldwide, so this is a short run rather than a catalog staple.
What's new
The headline here is the materials and the movement, not a gimmick. The 43.2mm case (Citizen's spec sheet also lists a 44.0mm diameter and 13.7mm thickness depending on how you measure the bezel) is forged from dark gray DLC-coated Super Titanium. That Duratect coating is Citizen's hardened surface treatment, and it does two jobs at once: it pushes the all-black "Spaceship Black" look the marketing leans on, and it makes the titanium far more scratch-resistant than untreated metal.
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The more interesting trick is the recrystallized titanium used on the octagonal bezel and the bracelet's center links. Citizen heats the titanium to extreme temperatures and then cools it, which forms natural mineral-like crystalline patterns across the surface. Because the process is physical rather than printed, no two watches end up identical. The same crystalline texture carries onto the gunmetal gray dial, which holds three sub-dials and a date window squeezed between 4 and 5 o'clock, all framed by a ceramic UTC bezel.
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Powering the watch is Citizen's Caliber F950, a solar Eco-Drive movement with GPS time sync. It pulls satellite time signals in as little as three seconds and adjusts to local time zones automatically. Citizen's Double Direct Flight feature lets you swap between home and local time in a couple of button presses, which is the kind of thing that matters if you actually cross time zones rather than just admire the complication count.
How it compares
Against its own predecessors, the F950 movement is the same satellite-sync platform Citizen has refined across the Attesa and Promaster lines, so the technical baseline is familiar. What separates this model is the finishing budget. Standard Attesa GPS models sit lower on price and use plainer titanium surfaces; the recrystallized bezel and links plus the DLC treatment are what push this into the $2,000-plus tier and justify the limited run.
Measured against the broader GPS-watch field, the closest mechanical-feeling rival is Seiko's Astron GPS Solar, which uses a comparable light-powered satellite-sync approach. Both skip the smartwatch route entirely. There's no app, no charging cable, no two-day battery anxiety. The Caliber F950 holds ±5 seconds per month accuracy when it can't see a satellite, and the power reserve stretches up to five years in power-save mode on a full charge. Compared to a Garmin or an Apple Watch, you trade fitness sensors and notifications for something that never needs a battery change and reads time off satellites instead of a phone.
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The feature list is dense for an analog watch: a 1/20-second chronograph measuring up to 24 hours, perpetual calendar, UTC display, daylight saving support, power reserve and light-level indicators, world time across 40 zones and 27 cities, dual time, and luminous hands. The sapphire crystal gets anti-reflective coating, and water resistance is rated to 100 meters (10 bar), which covers swimming but not serious diving.
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Who it's for
This is a watch for the buyer who wants atomic-clock-grade timekeeping without wearing a screen. Frequent travelers get the most out of the GPS sync and Double Direct Flight, since the watch resets itself the moment you land. The limited 1,800-unit production and the unique crystalline finishing also make it a collector piece, the sort of thing that holds appeal precisely because no two units look the same.
If you want step counts, heart rate, and notifications, this is the wrong watch and a Garmin or Apple Watch will serve you better for less. But if the appeal is a self-charging, self-correcting titanium instrument with a genuinely distinctive case finish, the CC4107-80H makes a strong case at its price. You can check current availability and the full specification on Citizen's US site and the regional Citizen UK store.

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