Super Clone Rolex Land-Dweller
Land-Dweller Watches(6)
Land-DwellerSAVE $40Land-Dweller 36mm Ice Blue Dial
Land-DwellerSAVE $40Land-Dweller 36mm Everose Gold
Land-DwellerSAVE $40Land-Dweller 36mm Stainless Steel
Land-DwellerSAVE $40Land-Dweller 40mm Ice Blue Dial
Land-DwellerSAVE $40Land-Dweller 40mm Everose Gold
Land-DwellerSAVE $40Land-Dweller 40mm Stainless Steel
About the Land-Dweller
The Land-Dweller is the watch Rolex dropped in April 2025, and it's the first brand-new Rolex in years. We carry all 6 references right now: three in 38mm and three in 40mm. You get steel, rose gold, and the pale Ice Blue dial that real buyers have to pay platinum money for. The bracelet flows out of the case in one piece, the dial has that honeycomb pattern, and the case sits flat on the wrist. Japanese tier from $359, Swiss tier from $999.

Rolex's Newest Collection
Rolex put the Land-Dweller out in April 2025, and it caught a lot of people off guard. They hadn't launched a brand-new collection in years. Most Rolex releases are just small updates to the Submariner or the Datejust, but this one came out of nowhere with a new case shape, a new bracelet style, and a new movement. It also pushed Rolex into a part of the watch market they had been ignoring for fifty years: the bracelet that flows right out of the case, the same look the Royal Oak and the Nautilus made famous. Rolex finally has its own answer for that crowd.
Three things stand out when you handle one. The honeycomb dial is the obvious one. It's a tight pattern of small hexagons, kind of like the back of a beehive flattened out, and it picks up light in a way no other Rolex dial does. Walk past one in the right room and the dial almost looks alive. Then there's the bracelet. On a Submariner or a Datejust the bracelet bolts onto the case with little pins called spring bars, so you can swap it for a leather strap. On the Land-Dweller the bracelet links come straight out of the case, so it's all one piece. You can't change it, and that's part of the design. Last is the movement inside, the new Caliber 7135. It ticks faster than every other Rolex movement, which gives the seconds hand a smoother sweep, and it uses a new ticking system Rolex calls Dynapulse that is supposed to wear out slower over time.
We have all 6 of the current references in stock. Three of them are 38mm: the 127234 in steel, the 127235 in rose gold, and the 127236 in the pale Ice Blue dial. The other three are the 40mm versions of the same lineup: 127334, 127335, and 127336. Both case sizes use the same honeycomb dial and the same Caliber 7135 movement, so the only real difference is how big it sits on the wrist. The 38mm reads a bit dressier and old school. The 40mm reads bigger and more modern. The Ice Blue versions are the ones to know about. At the real Rolex shop the Ice Blue dial only comes on solid platinum models, which is why those two references cost twenty to thirty thousand dollars more than the steel ones. In our shop you can get the Ice Blue look on any tier without paying platinum money.
A note on what we can and can't copy. The honeycomb dial, the case shape, the integrated bracelet, the dial colors and the proportions, all of that we copy faithfully. Both the Japanese and the Swiss tier give you the look you want. The one place we fall short is the new movement. Nobody in the replica world has cracked the Caliber 7135's faster beat or the new Dynapulse system yet. Both our tiers run at the standard rate the rest of the replica industry uses. The seconds sweep is still smooth, just not 5Hz smooth. If you wear the watch on your wrist, nobody will ever know. If you put it on a timing machine and compare it to a real one, that is where the gap shows up. Worth knowing before you buy.
What to Expect
Brand New Rolex
First all-new Rolex collection in years. Be one of the first people to wear it without sitting on a five-year waitlist.
Honeycomb Dial
The dial is a tight pattern of small hexagons. It catches light in a way no other Rolex dial does, and you can spot one from across a room.
Integrated Bracelet
The bracelet links come straight out of the case in one piece. Same look as the Royal Oak and the Nautilus. Sits flat and clean on the wrist.
Two Movement Tiers
Japanese Miyota from $359 or Swiss ETA-clone from $999. Both run at the standard 4Hz beat. The genuine 5Hz Caliber 7135 is not in the replica world yet.
Ice Blue Dial
References 127236 and 127336 have the pale Ice Blue dial. At the real Rolex shop this dial only comes on solid platinum, so it is the most expensive version. We have it on every tier.
38mm and 40mm
Both case sizes available. The 38mm wears a bit dressy and old school. The 40mm wears bigger and more modern. Same dial, same bracelet, same movement.
Land-Dweller Replica — Frequently Asked Questions
When did the Rolex Land-Dweller come out?
April 2025. It is the first brand-new Rolex collection in years. Most Rolex releases are just small tweaks to the Submariner or the Datejust, so a fully new collection from scratch is a big deal. Rolex used the launch to step into the integrated-bracelet sport watch part of the market that the Royal Oak and the Nautilus have owned for the past fifty years.
What is the honeycomb dial?
It is a dial finish made of small hexagons packed tight together, kind of like the back of a beehive flattened out. The pattern catches light at angles other Rolex dials don't, so the dial almost shifts in color as your wrist moves. It is the most distinctive thing about the Land-Dweller and the easiest way to spot one across a room. We copy the pattern faithfully on both the Japanese and the Swiss tier.
What is the new Caliber 7135 movement?
It is the engine inside the genuine Land-Dweller, and it is the first Rolex movement that ticks at 5Hz instead of the standard 4Hz. The faster tick gives the seconds hand a smoother sweep. The 7135 also uses a new system Rolex calls Dynapulse, which is just a different way of building the ticking parts so they wear out slower over time. Honest answer: neither our Japanese nor our Swiss tier copies the 5Hz beat or the Dynapulse parts yet. Both run at the standard 4Hz. If you wear the watch on your wrist, you won't notice. If you put it next to a real one and time it on a machine, that is where the gap shows up.
How is the Land-Dweller different from a Datejust?
The Datejust has a regular Oyster bracelet that bolts onto the case with small pins, so you can swap it for a leather strap any time. The Land-Dweller has an integrated bracelet, which means the links come straight out of the case as one piece. No pins, no swapping. Same idea as the Royal Oak or the Nautilus. The Land-Dweller is also a bit smaller and dressier than the Datejust 41, and it uses the new Caliber 7135 movement instead of the Datejust's older 3235.
Why is the Ice Blue dial special?
At the real Rolex shop, the pale Ice Blue dial is reserved for solid platinum watches only. Rolex made up this rule to keep the color rare. The Day-Date works the same way: the Ice Blue Day-Date is the platinum one. So when you see the Ice Blue Land-Dweller (references 127236 and 127336) at an official dealer, it costs twenty to thirty thousand dollars more than the steel version because it is solid platinum. In our shop, you can get the Ice Blue look on any tier and any case material at a normal price. You skip the platinum cost completely.
Why is the real Land-Dweller so hard to get?
Since the April 2025 launch, the waitlist at official Rolex dealers is somewhere around four to five years for the steel versions, and the resale market is running at two to three times the official price. Rolex makes fewer of these than people want on purpose. It is the same playbook they used to make the Daytona impossible to buy. If you don't already have a long buying history with a Rolex dealer, you cannot realistically get one at the real price right now. The replica is the only practical way to wear it this year.