This Watch Has No Dial, No Hands, And Still Costs More Than Your Car

The Hublot MP-10 Tourbillon is a futuristic, handless watch powered by rollers and a 35° tourbillon - limited, radical, and completely dial-free.

Hublot MP10 Tourbillon All-Black Ceramic

Image: Hublot

  • The Hublot MP-10 Tourbillon tells time using rollers, linear weights, and a 35° inclined tourbillon.
  • Two new ultra-limited editions in black ceramic and sapphire redefine how a high-complication watch can look.
  • The MP-10 is less a timepiece and more a wearable mechanical sculpture for collectors who’ve outgrown traditional luxury.

No dial. No hands. No problem. That’s the Hublot MP-10 Tourbillon. A watch so far removed from traditional horology, it barely qualifies as a timepiece. And that’s exactly the point.

Three years ago, Hublot released the first MP-10. It was a mechanical UFO — a brutalist machine made for the wrist. Now, in 2025, they’ve gone even further with two new limited editions: one in stealthy black ceramic, the other in fully transparent sapphire. Both are ridiculous. And of course, both are sold out.

Hublot MP-10 Tourbillon Sapphire
The Hublot MP-10 Tourbillon was a mechanical UFO when it was first released. Image: Hublot

Hublot’s New MP-10 Tourbillon is Fine Watchmaking, Reimagined

Let’s be clear: this isn’t for your average Submariner collector. The MP-10 is haute horlogerie reimagined as contempory science fiction. But then again, I wouldn’t expect anything less from the resident disruptors of the comfortable Swiss luxury market.

Hublot’s new MP-10 doesn’t come with any hour markers. There’s no second hand. No bezel. Instead, you get four rollers, two linear winding weights, and a tourbillon inclined at 35 degrees. If that sounds too complicated to understand, it’s because it is.

Hublot MP-10 Tourbillon
The Hublot MP-10 Tourbillon in black ceramic is a nod to the brand’s All-Black series. Image: Hublot

The movement itself boasts 592 components and is powered by a pair of vertical weights. Instead of a traditional rotor, these slide up and down to wind the mainspring.

The time is displayed on rollers at the top of the case, read horizontally through a magnified sapphire window. Below that, sits a circular power reserve indicator, colour-coded in green, orange, and red. At the base of the timpiece, a rotating tourbillon doubles as a seconds counter.

It’s not intuitive at all, and will likely take a few moments to get used to all the intricacies of this spectacular timepiece… but it’s completely worth it.

Available in Black Ceramic or Sapphire

The case itself is a feat of engineering. Not a single right angle in sight. Instead, you get a fluid geometry designed to reflect the movement from all sides.

The black ceramic version is dark, brooding, and unapologetically aggressive — a nod to one of Hublot’s more iconic collections, the All-Black series. Conversly, the sapphire model is the exact opposite: it’s light, ethereal, and completely see-through, right down to the translucent strap. It’s a nice touch from Hublot, catering to both palettes after the launch of the skeleton version of this piece at LVMH Watch Week last year.

Hublot MP-10 Tourbillon
The Hublot MP-10 Tourbillon is available in both clear sapphire and black ceramic. Image: Hublot

Both versions in 2025 are also limited: 50 pieces in black, just 30 in sapphire. That’s fewer than most concept cars, but still shows Hublot at its best — divisive, over-engineered, and proudly unhinged. For years, the brand has taken flak for its fusion design language. But watches like the MP-10 prove they’re pushing the medium forward.

Because watches like this are a reminder that timekeeping is just the excuse. What Hublot is selling here isn’t a product. It says: “We can, so we did.” A wearable testament to the brand’s enduring commitment to avant-garde design. In a world where every major brand is reissuing the same three heritage models, Hublot is building something absurd, unnecessary, and completely brilliant. And yes, it costs more than your car.

loader