A Pokémon G-Shock may finally be moving out of Casio’s smaller Baby-G lane and onto a full-sized GA-110 case.
A leaked image circulating from Instagram account @geesgshock appears to show the Casio GA-110PKM-7A, a new Casio x Pokémon collaboration model, according to Notebookcheck. If accurate, it would mark the first time the partnership has landed on a full-sized G-Shock rather than a compact Baby-G watch.
Leaked Casio GA-110PKM-7A image puts Pokémon on a full-sized G-Shock
The leaked model is tagged GA-110PKM-7A and appears to use the large GA-110 analog-digital case. That matters because Casio’s past Pokémon watches have stayed with smaller Baby-G models, including the BA-110PKC, which Notebookcheck says was released in 2020 and 2021.
The image shows a clear, translucent resin case and band. The dial carries visible “Pokémon” branding at the 3 o’clock position, while a small sub-dial near 9 o’clock appears styled after a Poké Ball.
Notebookcheck describes the color choices as Pikachu-inspired. The hour and minute hands use red and green tones, echoing Pikachu’s cheeks and tail, while the see-through case exposes internal components in the style of past clear G-Shock releases.
Casio and The Pokémon Company have not officially confirmed the GA-110PKM-7A, so pricing, release timing, specifications and regional availability remain unverified.
The source of the leak is also part of the story. @geesgshock said the image was a re-share and that an earlier post about the same watch was reportedly taken down at the source’s request. Notebookcheck framed the resurfacing as a positive sign, but that is still not the same as an official product announcement.
For collectors, the case size is the core signal. The leaked watch is not just another colorway. It would move Pokémon branding from Casio’s compact Baby-G line into one of G-Shock’s larger, more recognizable formats.
Pikachu shifts from Baby-G scale to Casio’s larger GA-110 case
The prior Casio x Pokémon watches sat in the Baby-G category. That line is built around more compact cases, and the earlier BA-110PKC-4A leaned heavily into Pikachu-specific details, including a face design where the hands resembled Pikachu’s face, a band ring and band with a heart-shaped female Pikachu tail, and a back engraving with Pikachu.
The leaked GA-110PKM-7A points in a different direction. It keeps the character cues, but places them inside a more aggressive G-Shock layout: oversized case, layered dial, analog-digital display and exposed mechanical styling.
| Detail | Earlier Pokémon Baby-G models | Leaked GA-110PKM-7A |
|---|---|---|
| Line | Baby-G | G-Shock |
| Case direction | Compact | Full-sized GA-110 |
| Known Pokémon cue | Pikachu-themed BA-110PKC details | Pokémon branding, Poké Ball-style sub-dial, Pikachu-coded hand colors |
| Status | Previously released | Unconfirmed leak |
That change could alter who pays attention. Baby-G Pokémon watches already had a clear character-collector angle. A GA-110 version would also pull in G-Shock buyers who track case platforms, translucent resin editions and collaboration references.
This is where the leak becomes more than a cosmetic update. Analysis: If Casio confirms the model, the GA-110PKM-7A would test whether Pokémon branding works on a larger mainline G-Shock format without losing the playful design language that made the Baby-G releases distinctive.
For readers following Casio’s broader watch pipeline, MLXIO has also covered separate G-Shock model moves, including An $860 Metal Bezel Hits Casio G-Shock GravityMaster and $5K G-Shock Leak Reveals Casio’s Blue Sapphire Flex. Those are separate products, but they show why small model-code and material details draw close attention before official retail pages appear.
Collectors now need Casio’s price, launch map and final specs
The open questions are basic but important: whether the GA-110PKM-7A launches globally, whether it appears first in Japan or another market, whether production is limited, and whether the leaked design matches the final retail version.
Notebookcheck says the leak implies a release in the near future and suggests it may be a wider global drop rather than a region-limited one. That remains an inference from the leak, not a confirmed Casio plan.
Pricing is also missing. Casio has not posted an official product page, and there is no verified retail price in the available material. Until that changes, any pricing claim would be speculation.
The same applies to technical specifications. The GA-110 base gives a strong clue about the format, but Casio has not confirmed the module, dimensions, water resistance, packaging, included extras or regional model references for this Pokémon version.
For comparison within Casio coverage, MLXIO recently tracked another case where pricing was a live question in No Price Yet: Casio G-Shock DW-5600 Drops Worldwide. The lesson here is similar: model names can leak before the commercial details that decide how collectors actually approach a launch.
The practical read: treat the leak as credible, not final
The strongest grounded takeaway is narrow: a leaked image shows a transparent GA-110-style Pokémon G-Shock, and the model code attached to it is GA-110PKM-7A. The strongest implication is that Casio may be ready to scale the Pokémon collaboration beyond Baby-G.
That does not make the product official. Casio and The Pokémon Company have not confirmed the watch, and leaked images can differ from launch versions in naming, packaging, color balance or release timing.
The next meaningful signal will be an official Casio listing, retailer page or announcement from The Pokémon Company. Until then, collectors should watch for three things: confirmed model code, regional availability and whether the final product keeps the translucent GA-110 case shown in the leak.
Key Takeaways
- This could be the first Pokémon collaboration to appear on a full-sized Casio G-Shock instead of a Baby-G.
- Collectors may see the GA-110 case as a more significant release than another themed colorway.
- Pricing, release date, specifications and availability remain uncertain until Casio or The Pokémon Company confirms it.










