The Breitling Superocean Heritage B01 Chronograph 42 is a laidback but serious diver that nails daily wear in Australia.

The Breitling Superocean Heritage B01 Chronograph 42 is a laidback but serious diver that nails daily wear in Australia.
At Guantanamo Bay, over 50 detainees were found wearing the Casio F91W.
IWC’s latest Mojave Desert release combines military-grade ceramic, a 120-hour movement, and stealth design — proving once and for all that beige doesn’t have to be boring.
Hublot’s Square Bang Tourbillon leans into the square dial with a reinvented movement to match. Carbon-fibre, square architecture, and unapologetic disruption. This is inherently Hublot.
Sydney Airport’s lost property auction is back, but watch lovers beware. From fake APs to overpriced Moonswatches, it’s become a horological minefield for bidders.
The Patek Philippe Nautilus 5711/1A was discontinued in 2021, just as demand hit fever pitch. Now it’s a $150K flex few will ever own.
That was the most common comment I got wearing the Chopard Alpine Eagle 41 (Ref. 298600-3001) through Geneva during Watches & Wonders. It’s not loud, not trying too hard, just quietly vibey.
Crafted entirely in Fleurier, the Tonda PF Micro-Rotor embodies discreet luxury, ultra-thin engineering, and vertical integration across movement, dial, and case at haute horlogerie standards.
A watch collection to die for. Rolex, JLC, Panerai and Omega.
The Rolex Cellini Moonphase is a poetic outlier: refined, complicated, and quietly confident. It’s the Rolex you’d never expect… and arguably the best they’ve made.
Breitling’s latest Navitimer Cosmonaute celebrates Scott Carpenter’s centenary with a 50-piece tribute to the first Swiss wristwatch worn in space in 1962.
It’s clean. It’s reliable. It’s boring. The Rolex Oyster Perpetual 41 might be a nice watch, but it's overpriced in today's market.
TAG Heuer revives its most iconic racing chronograph with Gulf stripes, a left-hand crown, and the same cinematic swagger McQueen wore at Le Mans.
Monaco just got louder. TAG Heuer’s Split-Seconds Chronograph drops in DMARGE Yellow titanium-clad, race-ready, and built to leave everything else behind.
Zenith’s latest Chronomaster Triple Calendar gets a dial upgrade, with natural lapis lazuli delivering one of the most visually striking faces in modern watchmaking.
From 1988 to 2000, Rolex relied on Zenith’s El Primero to power the Daytona, but wasn't exactly quick to acknowledge the movement that helped make it a legend.
The Omega Railmaster returns in 2025 with new dial gradients and a minimalist 38mm design, proving once again that not all icons come from space.
A refined pink gold dress watch with vintage flair, the Jaeger-LeCoultre Reverso Tribute Monoface pairs pink gold, a slim Deco case with a rare Milanese bracelet, making it a standout choice for 2025.
Girard-Perregaux has just dropped the Deep Diver, a bold, retro-inspired diver’s watch pulled straight from the brand’s 1960s archives and reborn with 2025 specs.
With its bold orange detailing, rubber strap, and marine-grade titanium case, the Ulysse Nardin Diver proves that looking backwards can still move watchmaking forward.
If your budget tops out at $5K, skip the hype and buy the Cartier Tank Must SolarBeat™ — an eco-powered icon worn by men who know.
The Hublot MP-10 Tourbillon is a futuristic, handless watch powered by rollers and a 35° tourbillon - limited, radical, and completely dial-free.
Rolex made a quartz watch. It ticks. It’s rare, sharp-looking, and cheap, for now. The Oysterquartz might be Rolex’s best-kept investment secret.
Inside Vacheron Constantin’s most secretive room, where centuries-old machines, master artisans, and time-honoured techniques reveal the soul of 270 years of watchmaking.
TAG Heuer isn’t Australia’s biggest watch brand by volume, but it might be the most loved. This next one proves it.
This limited edition Grand Seiko SBGP017 quartz watch proves that precision, beauty, and craftsmanship don’t belong exclusively to mechanical timepieces.
A blacked-out Omega Seamaster 300 Dive is quietly one of the coolest watches around.
This Rolex is the last of the true tool watches: humble, tough, and built for those who actually needed it.
In the world of luxury watches, Swiss watchmaker F.P. Journe is one of the last real purists.
Raymond Weil has managed to prove that bigger isn't always better when it comes to Swiss luxury timepieces.
Walton Goggins' timepiece was old-money elegance at its best.
Sick of the same old Rolex flex? DMARGE Founder, Luc Wiesman unpacks why he’s over the crown (for now) and what he’s looking at instead.
For decades, Cartier was the beautiful outsider — a jeweller that happened to make watches. Now it's the hottest watch brand in the world.
We prove you don't have to break the bank to start your watch collection...
For more than 50 years, Doxa has been a mainstay in the dive watch market, developing functional pieces built not for the boutique window, but for the open ocean.
Grand Seiko's new timepieces reflect the Japanese brand's enduring pursuit of precision and accuracy.
The only thing worse than Rolex waitlists… is Rolex waitlists with a 31% tax attached.
The ODYSSEUS Honeygold is a quiet mic drop from a German brand you might not have even heard of.
Rolex’s new Land-Dweller was meant to be a bold debut, but with its PRX-like design and underwhelming impact, it left many wondering if Tissot did it better.
Rory McIlroy has been a proud ambassador for Omega since 2013, a partnership rooted in shared values of precision, performance, and legacy.
According to Ackman, this is part investment, part passion, part mission.
Watches & Wonders concludes for another year. Here are our favourite releases from the world's biggest watch event.
In the brutal world of Paris-Roubaix's one-day cycling classic, even luxury timepieces can become weapons of self-destruction. Just ask Tadej Pogačar.
A premium Swiss dive watch and one of the horological world's most reputable winders; the perfect additions to any collection.
Jacob & Co. has managed to capture the entire world for your wrist.
Baume & Mercier bring the French Riviera to Geneva.
A world-first, because three axes were never going to be enough.
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