Editorial
The 1858 Geosphere is Montblanc's boldest complication: two rotating globes at 6 and 9 o'clock display world time by mapping the northern and southern hemispheres simultaneously. At 42mm it wears comfortably, and the cartographic dial is one of the more original executions in the GMT category. If you want a world-time watch that looks nothing like everything else, this is it.
Montblanc introduced the Geosphere in 2019 as part of the 1858 collection, which revives the brand's Minerva heritage through alpine and expedition aesthetics. The dual-globe world-time display draws directly on cartographic tradition, referencing the kind of terrestrial globes that appeared in exploration-era atlases. The MB 29.25 is an in-house movement developed specifically for this complication, with both hemispheres driven by the same gear train.
Montblanc positioned the reference as an accessible entry into genuine Swiss complications, pricing it well below comparable world-time displays from Geneva's upper tier. The 128792 in steel has become the primary production reference since launch.
The globe subdials are legible in good light but can be hard to read quickly at a glance, especially in low light. This is a watch you study, not one you check at a traffic light. The MB 29.25 is relatively new caliber with a short service history in the wild, so long-term reliability data is still limited.
Some buyers find the dial busy; the two hemispheres plus date and power reserve leave little visual breathing room. Montblanc's resale market is softer than its Swiss competitors, so expect to recover less than half of retail if you sell in the near term. Confirm the bracelet or strap configuration before purchase, as secondary market listings vary and some have been modified.