Wishdoit WSD9032 Review – Striking Blue MOP Diver With a Fully Lumed Bezel
The Wishdoit WSD9032 arrives as a new diver with a blue mother-of-pearl dial, sapphire crystal, stainless steel construction, and the Miyota 8215 automatic movement inside. It also brings a fully luminous bezel into the mix, which gives this watch a more distinctive visual and functional character than a standard flat-dial diver.
At around $140 before tax, there is a fair amount to discuss here. Within this sub $200 price range, there are a plenty of exciting alternatives worth comparing. The dial is the obvious visual draw, the bezel has some real strengths, and the bracelet needs a closer look of its own. This is one of those watches where the case, dial, lume, bezel, movement, and bracelet each tell a slightly different part of the story.
Design & Case
The WSD9032 measures 39.7mm in diameter, 11.2mm thick, and 47.6mm lug-to-lug, with inverted end links helping that effective length. The lug width is 20mm, and the bracelet tapers down to 16mm at the clasp. On paper, that gives the watch a controlled wearable profile, though visually it still carries quite a wide stance.

The case itself is where the watch starts to feel more structured. Across the case, there is a mix of brushed and polished surfaces. The side flank uses a very fine horizontal brushing style, almost smooth in the way it catches the light, while the case midsection has a rounded profile before the lugs become more slab-sided and turn down quite aggressively toward the wrist.

Between the flank and the lug hoods, the case uses 45-degree polished bevels. Those polished transitions sharpen the geometry and give the watch stronger definition. The lug hoods are brushed, though there is a slight difference in grain and tone between the brushing on the lugs and the bracelet end links. Mechanically, the bracelet integrates cleanly into the case, but visually the transition is not completely seamless. We’ve covered a few Wishdoit watches before, and this one continues the brand’s established design language.
Movement & Crown
Inside the WSD9032 is the Miyota 8215, a Japanese self-winding automatic movement with 21 jewels, a beat rate of 21,600 vibrations per hour, and around 41 hours of power reserve. It is a simple and widely used automatic movement across budget and entry-level watches.

The movement is dependable, but it has a more basic feel compared with something like the Seiko NH series. The winding action can feel a little grainier, and the overall impression is slightly less smooth and refined when operating the crown.

The crown sits on the right-hand side of the case and measures 6.3mm across. It is signed, screws in, and has deep, notchy knurling with the brand logo on the tip. It sits between vertically pinched crown guards, which gives the side profile a slightly more elegant shape while keeping the watch firmly in sporty diver territory. If this kind of versatile diver is on your shortlist, our Comparison Tool helps you place comparable watches side by side and see how their specifications differ before deciding
Bezel
The WSD9032 uses a 120-click unidirectional bezel with deep, well-machined coin-edge teeth and a slight overhang above the case flank. The grip is easy and confident, and the glossy blue ceramic insert carries a white 60-minute scale that is fully luminous.

The rotation has an audible, mechanical, and distinct sound. Each click is clearly separated from the next, and the resistance sits more on the heavy side without becoming overly tight. It needs deliberate input, and the overall action is satisfying to operate.

There is no real backplay once the bezel lands in a detent. Alignment at 12 is good. The one slight negative is that the bezel can land between detents, which suggests the click spring preload is not quite strong enough to force the bezel cleanly into the next index position every time.
Bracelet
The WSD9032 comes on a Jubilee-style bracelet with a five-link appearance, brushed outer links, and three polished center links. Visually, the bracelet works with the blue dial and polished ceramic bezel, giving the watch a sportier and slightly dressier character.

The taper is one of the stronger points. It runs from 20mm at the lugs down to 16mm at the clasp, giving the bracelet a slimmer and more elegant silhouette on the wrist. Visually and ergonomically, the proportions are well judged.
Construction-wise, the bracelet is more mixed. It is held together by push pins rather than screw pins. The bigger issue is the tolerance between the links. When the bracelet is stretched or flexed, visible gaps open up, and they are not subtle.

That said, the bracelet is fluid, link articulation is good, and it wears comfortably on the wrist. The clasp brings things back slightly with a milled clasp, double-pusher release, five micro-adjustment positions, and a milled folding wing inside. The watch also uses a screw-down caseback, supporting the 150m water resistance rating.
Crystal & Dial
The WSD9032 uses a flat slab sapphire crystal that sits almost perfectly in line with the top of the bezel insert. It also has anti-reflective coating, which matters here because the dial has a lot of visual texture beneath the crystal.

The eye is first guided inward by a sloping brushed rehaut finished in a silver tone. That rehaut carries the black printed minute track, adding depth and function before the dial itself takes over.
The main visual feature is the blue mother-of-pearl dial, arranged as a pattern of hexagonal MOP sections. It is almost like scales or fractured tiles across the dial. Because each section catches light slightly differently, the dial shifts through blues, darker tones, brighter flashes, and watery reflections depending on the angle.

The dial does not reflect light as one single surface. It breaks that light across the separate facets, so different hexagons light up while others fall back into shadow. The sapphire crystal is clear, the AR coating helps control reflections, and the dial furniture gives enough contrast to keep the display readable.
The indices are applied and chrome-edged, with lume plots in the center. The layout uses elongated irregular batons at 12, 3, and 9, with square plots elsewhere. At 6 o’clock, there is a fairly large chrome-edged date window, and the size makes the date quick to read.

Branding is kept minimal, with the Wishdoit logo under 12 and “Automatic” and “150M” above the date window at 6. The hands are semi-skeletonized batons, and the seconds hand has a lume tip. The lume is bright blue across the indices, hands, seconds tip, and fully luminous bezel. It charges quickly and lasts for a long time.
Summary
The Wishdoit WSD9032 is most interesting around the dial and bezel. The blue mother-of-pearl hexagonal pattern gives the watch real movement under the crystal, while the glossy blue ceramic bezel and fully luminous scale add another strong visual and functional element.
The case dimensions are sensible, with a 39.7mm diameter, 11.2mm thickness, 47.6mm lug-to-lug, and 20mm lug width. The case finishing has enough definition through the horizontal brushing, polished bevels, rounded midsection, and aggressively turned-down lugs.

The bracelet is where the compromises are clearest. The taper and wrist comfort work well, and the clasp specification is solid, but the push-pin construction and visible gaps between links show where shortcuts were made. The Miyota 8215 also does the job, though its crown feel is more basic than some alternatives. Taken as a whole, the WSD9032 brings together a distinctive MOP dial, strong blue lume, a usable bezel, and a sporty diver case with a few construction points worth noting. For those who appreciate this particular case and dial execution, there are alternatives built around the same principles, for example the Wishdoit Ripple Diver.
Wishdoit WSD9032 Specifications
| Specification | Details |
|---|---|
| Model | Wishdoit WSD9032 |
| Dimensions | |
| Case Diameter | 39.7mm |
| Case Thickness | 11.2mm |
| Lug-to-Lug | 47.6mm helped by inverted end links |
| Lug Width | 20mm |
| Crown | 6.3mm signed crown with deep notchy knurling and brand logo on the tip |
| Crown Type | Screw-in |
| Design | |
| Case Material | Stainless steel |
| Case Finish | Mix of brushed and polished surfaces; very fine horizontal brushing on the case flank; rounded midsection; slab-sided lugs turned down aggressively; 45-degree polished bevels between the flank and lug hoods |
| Crystal | Flat slab sapphire crystal with anti-reflective coating |
| Caseback | Screw-down caseback |
| Bracelet/Strap | Jubilee-style bracelet with five-link appearance; brushed outer links and three polished center links; push-pin construction; fluid bracelet with good link articulation; Tolerance are average, visible gaps between links when bracelet stretched or flexed |
| Bracelet Taper | 20mm at the lugs down to 16mm at the clasp |
| Clasp | Milled clasp with double-pusher release, five micro-adjustment positions, and milled folding wing inside |
| Bezel | 120-click unidirectional bezel with deep well-machined coin-edge teeth, slight overhang, glossy blue ceramic insert, white 60-minute scale, audible mechanical clicks, heavier resistance, no real backplay, good alignment at 12; can land between detents |
| Bezel Insert | Glossy blue ceramic insert with fully luminous white 60-minute scale |
| Dial | Blue mother-of-pearl dial arranged as hexagonal sections; sloping brushed silver-tone rehaut with black printed minute track |
| Dial Color | Blue mother-of-pearl |
| Dial Text | Wishdoit logo under 12; Automatic and 150M above the date window at 6 |
| Rehaut | Sloping brushed silver-tone rehaut with black printed minute track |
| Indices | Applied chrome-edged indices with lume plots; elongated irregular batons at 12, 3, and 9; square plots elsewhere |
| Date | Fairly large chrome-edged date window at 6 |
| Hands | Semi-skeletonized baton hands; seconds hand with lume tip |
| Lume | Bright blue lume across the indices, hands, seconds tip, and fully luminous bezel; charges quickly and lasts for a long time |
| Water Resistance | 150m |
| Movement | |
| Movement | Miyota 8215 Japanese self-winding automatic movement |
| Frequency | 21,600 vibrations per hour |
| Jewels | 21 jewels |
| Power Reserve | Around 41 hours |
| Price | |
| Approx. Price | $140 before tax |




























