Casio’s premium Pro Trek PRW-B1000WM-1 is officially on sale in the US, and early retail listings suggest it won’t be easy to grab for long. Released as part of a collaboration with White Mountaineering, this limited-availability model is priced at $990 and is already being shown with “limited stock” status—an indicator that supplies are likely tight.
Built on the Pro Trek PRW-B1000 platform, this special edition takes a noticeably more upscale direction with materials. Instead of the more common resin-focused build, it features a solid titanium bracelet paired with a matte black case. The result is a rugged outdoor watch that still looks refined and understated, with most of its character coming from surface finishes and textures rather than loud color accents.
One of the biggest visual signatures is the patterned bezel, which incorporates White Mountaineering’s recognizable triangular design language. It’s a subtle touch, but it gives the watch a distinctive identity without making it feel overly flashy—something that should appeal to buyers who want an outdoor-ready tool watch that can also pass as an everyday premium timepiece.
On the feature side, the PRW-B1000WM-1 combines several of Casio’s most wanted technologies in one package. You get Tough Solar charging for low-maintenance power, Bluetooth connectivity for phone pairing, and Multi Band 6 radio time syncing for accurate automatic time updates where supported. It also includes Casio’s Triple Sensor system, enabling practical outdoor measurements such as altitude, barometric pressure, temperature, and compass direction.
The display uses an analog-digital layout, keeping the face clean while still offering the convenience of a digital readout. A small digital screen sits in the lower portion of the dial, while a subdial at the 9 o’clock position works as a location indicator when used with the Casio Watches app. With the app, you can view direction and distance to saved points, making it useful for hikes, travel, or navigating back to key locations.
Durability and wearability are clearly part of the pitch here. Titanium helps cut weight compared to steel, which matters on a full-metal watch designed for all-day use. The dial is covered by sapphire crystal with an anti-reflective coating for improved clarity outdoors. And even with the metal exterior, the case construction retains a resin core for shock absorption—staying true to the tougher roots that Pro Trek fans expect.
At $990, this sits firmly in the higher end of the Pro Trek lineup, aimed at buyers who want premium materials plus serious sensor features in a distinctive collaboration design. If you’ve been considering it, the limited stock note on retail listings suggests waiting may not be the best strategy.






