Verdict
The Fossil Y2K Big Tic Pocket Watch isn’t trying to compete with modern smartwatches or high-end mechanical timepieces. Instead, it succeeds by doing something far more emotional. It captures a very specific cultural moment when gadgets felt exciting, flame graphics were everywhere, and the future looked like chrome and glowing pixels. Holding it feels a bit like rediscovering an old DVD from childhood or hearing a familiar pop anthem from the early 2000s. It’s simple, slightly kitschy, and unapologetically fun. And sometimes, that’s exactly what a watch should be, even if it costs ₹13,495.
The Good
- Y2K nostalgia
- Playful animation
The Bad
- Dim LCD display
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Design
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Functionality
Some objects don’t just tell time; they tell you where you once were in life. The Fossil Y2K Big Tic Pocketwatch is exactly that kind of an artefact. Fossil’s decision to revive the iconic Big Tic design in pocketwatch form feels like opening a small stainless-steel portal back to the early 2000s. And I’d be remiss if I did not say I was hit by a nostalgia trip.
Back then, the world felt different. Spy gadgets from films like Spy Kids felt entirely plausible, DVDs were passed around classrooms like contraband treasures, and pop culture was dominated by the unstoppable energy of artists like the Backstreet Boys and Britney Spears. It was the era of metallic fonts, flame decals, and technology that proudly looked futuristic.
I was still in school when the original Big Tic watches appeared around that time. I didn’t know about the watch then, but seeing this new pocketwatch version now makes it easy to imagine how the flame-licked digital display would have instantly grabbed my attention. And that’s exactly what this ₹13,495 piece trades on: pure Y2K nostalgia.
Design

The Y2K Big Tic pocketwatch looks like it was designed during the height of the millennium aesthetic, and that’s precisely the point. The polished stainless-steel case feels reassuringly solid, with a classic pocketwatch silhouette complete with chain attachment. At first glance, it seems traditional, almost old-world. But the moment you look closer, the dial reveals something entirely different.
Running across the centre is the signature Big Tic digital strip, where animated flames flicker in a looping pattern. Technically, this animation is produced using a small reflective monochrome LCD panel, which is the same basic display technology used in classic digital watches and calculators. It’s a low-power LCD matrix that cycles through simple pixel frames to create the illusion of moving flames. This technology is part of the Y2K Big Tic’s nostalgic appeal, but it’s also where the watch shows its age.

Because the LCD is reflective rather than emissive, it relies entirely on ambient light to be visible. Indoors or in dim environments, the flames can look faint and somewhat underwhelming. When there isn’t enough light to reflect off the display, the animation loses much of its visual drama. That might have been acceptable in 1999, but in 2026, it feels like a missed opportunity. Fossil could easily have implemented a more advanced display, perhaps a brighter transflective LCD or even a subtle micro-LED panel, while still preserving the retro animation aesthetic.

Instead, the watch sticks rigidly to the original technology. For purists, that may be the point, but from a design perspective, it leaves the flames looking cooler in theory than they sometimes do in practice. Still, there’s something charming about that contrast: Victorian-era pocketwatch form meets early-internet pixel graphics.
Functionality

Technically speaking, the watch is refreshingly straightforward. A quartz movement handles the analogue timekeeping, while the animated display in the centre runs via a low-power LCD module. A small pusher lets you cycle through animation modes, the flame pattern being the standout. The crown adjusts the time in the traditional way. There’s no attempt to make this a feature-heavy gadget. And that restraint works in its favour. The Big Tic was never about horological complexity; it was about personality. The animation loops quietly across the dial, adding a playful dynamic to what would otherwise be a fairly conventional watch face.

