Omega has transformed the spy gadget timepiece from the upcoming 007 First Light video game into a real, purchasable chronograph — marking a bold first for the Seamaster Diver 300M’s Bond legacy.
Swiss watchmaker Omega continues its relationship with the Bond franchise with a striking new chronograph 007 fans will love.
From the Game to Your Wrist

When IO Interactive and Amazon MGM Studios set out to equip their reimagined young James Bond with a signature timepiece in 007 First Light, they turned — as cinema’s 007 always has — to Omega. The result is the OMEGA Seamaster Diver 300M Chronograph 007 First Light, a watch that lives at the intersection of gaming culture and haute horlogerie.
A third-person action-adventure, 007 First Light follows a 26-year-old James Bond, a promising yet rebellious Royal Navy air crewman on the cusp of earning his 00 status and is available on PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC, with a Nintendo Switch 2 version following in Summer 2026.
In the new video game, Bond’s Seamaster isn’t mere jewellery: it houses a hacking device capable of disrupting electronics and a powerful laser strap. Omega has now translated that fictional icon into a real-world timepiece, welcoming it into its celebrated James Bond watch collection.
A Historic First: The Chronograph Arrives

Perhaps the most significant detail for collectors is this: the new release is the first chronograph ever produced for James Bond’s Seamaster Diver 300M lineage. The addition wasn’t arbitrary — it mirrors the gameplay mechanics in 007 First Light, where the subdials serve an active function during missions. Design and purpose are inseparable here.
At 44 mm in stainless steel, the watch commands the wrist. The polished black ceramic bezel ring bears a white enamel diving scale, while the pushers — a detail rarely executed in ceramic — are finished in that same polished black ceramic, giving the watch an unusually cohesive, monolithic front profile.

The black ceramic dial carries the Seamaster Diver’s signature laser-engraved wave pattern. What distinguishes this particular execution is a PVD bronze gold subdial ring at 3 o’clock — a warm metallic accent set against the black field that echoes the game’s visual identity. That same bronze gold material reappears on the central chronograph seconds hand, creating a deliberate visual thread across the dial.
All other hands and indices are rhodium-plated and filled with white Super-LumiNova, ensuring strong legibility in low light. The Seamaster name is printed in red — a nod to Bond-edition tradition — and a date window sits at 6 o’clock.
Movement: Omega’s Finest Calibre

Inside beats the self-winding Co-Axial Master Chronometer Calibre 9900 — Omega’s benchmark for precision, performance, and magnetic resistance. The layout is clean: small seconds at 9 o’clock, with a combined 60-minute and 12-hour recorder at 3 o’clock. The movement is visible through a sapphire crystal caseback engraved with a 007 First Light logo in black metallization, making the reverse nearly as compelling as the dial side.
The NATO Strap Story

Every Bond watch tells part of its story through its strap, and this release is no different. The exclusive NATO strap included with the watch is inspired by the game’s visual universe: a striped black, grey, and beige colourway — the same palette seen on the strap worn in No Time to Die — but rendered in a distinct new pattern. It is finished with a special Seamaster buckle and engraved keepers bearing 007 and First Light markings.
For those who want to go further into the game’s world, six additional NATO strap options are available separately, each modelled after the different playable strap versions found within 007 First Light.
