The Royal Pop is not a wristwatch, which is precisely the point. Swatch and Audemars Piguet have produced an object that sits outside the traditional watch category entirely, and the queues stretching around Causeway Bay prove that the hype machine still works when the product is genuinely strange. But the watch community's ambivalence is the real signal here: the collaboration earns attention through category disruption rather than craft, which is a different value proposition entirely. Luxury is increasingly borrowing streetwear's playbook, and the tension between those two logics is becoming impossible to ignore.
Three stories today point to the same shift: the Royal Pop generates overnight queues through categorical novelty rather than horology; On's robot tours London as a performance rather than a product launch; Margiela sells fragrance through emotional disorientation rather than scent description. The common mechanism is that the experience of encounter has become the primary value proposition, and the object itself is secondary.
Brands are no longer asking consumers to judge the product. They are asking them to be inside the moment.
For people who’d rather be early and wrong than late and safe.