Raketa (“Ракета” / “Rocket”) is one of the most iconic Russian/Soviet watch names — and while the brand isn’t a “pure” modern field-watch specialist, a lot of its best-known designs line up with what field-watch people actually want: high legibility, simple three-hand layouts, and a utilitarian, story-rich vibe.
If you’re new to the category, start with What Is a Field Watch? and our 10-point checklist. Then come back here for the Raketa-specific notes.
Quick take
- Best for: collectors, history lovers, and anyone who wants a legible, characterful everyday watch that’s a little different from the usual Swiss/Japanese picks.
- Watch-outs: references and specs vary a lot (especially vintage). Always verify water resistance, crystal type, and movement details on the exact listing.
- Field-friendly features to look for: big Arabic numerals, matte/low-glare dials, strong minute track, and practical water resistance. Our Water Resistance guide explains what the ratings mean in real life.
Raketa “field watch” DNA: what to know
Raketa’s modern lineup leans into bold, readable designs and brand history (space, polar exploration, military-adjacent use cases). For field-watch buyers, the practical angle is legibility + simple ownership. If you’re comparing movements and maintenance, our guide Quartz vs Automatic vs Manual vs Solar is a useful refresher.
Shopping checklist (especially if you’re buying vintage)
- Confirm the exact reference and photos: Raketa has many dial variants and re-issues.
- Ask about service history: older mechanical pieces can be great… or money pits.
- Crystal & case condition: scratches can be normal; deep dial moisture damage is a bigger red flag.
- Water resistance: treat vintage WR claims cautiously unless it’s recently pressure-tested.
Best Raketa picks for a field-watch fan (starting points)
Note: These are “field-friendly” starting points (legibility + everyday usability), not a claim that every model below is a strict military field watch.
1) Big Zero (modern re-issue)

The Raketa Big Zero is the easy recommendation for field-watch people: bold numerals, instant readability, and an unmistakable identity. If you want one Raketa that “makes sense” in a field-watch rotation next to Hamilton/Seiko/Timex, this is usually the one.
2) Polar / 24-hour models (for the “tool watch story”)

Raketa’s polar/24-hour concept is famous because it solves a real problem (day/night orientation in environments where the sun isn’t a reliable cue). If you like tool watches with a real rationale — and you’re okay with a learning curve — start by browsing the Special collection and the Polar listing.
3) “Russian Code” / space-adjacent designs (if you want something different)

Some Raketa models are less “field watch” and more “statement tool watch” — still, for collectors, the appeal is the same: wearable history and a dial you can spot across a room. If that’s your vibe, the Russian Code and Baykonur pages are good rabbit holes.
Alternatives (more “classic field watch” choices)
If you want the classic field-watch formula first (and the Raketa story second), these are safer baseline picks:
- Hamilton Khaki Field Mechanical — modern, clean, and extremely field-watch-y.
- Bulova Hack — vintage-military inspiration with mainstream availability.
- Vaer C3 Solar — “grab and go” solar practicality.
Our Raketa reviews (coming next)
TODO: Create a dedicated Raketa Big Zero review draft with more hands-on buyer guidance (variants, wear notes, and alternatives), then link it here (spotlight ↔ review cross-link rule).
Sources & image credits
- Official Raketa product pages used for specs/images: Big Zero, Polar, Russian Code.
Where to buy (Amazon)
- Amazon (US): Search “Raketa field watch”