WM Watches focus on affordable mechanical watches with a particular emphasis on colorful dial work, compact sports cases, and practical diver-style specifications. Models stand out for fired enamel dials, AR-coated sapphire crystal, NH35 automatic movements, screw-down crowns, dual-colour lume, and 200m water resistance, positioning WM as a value-focused brand for buyers who want more visual character than a basic homage watch.
WM Watch Video Reviews
Latest WM Watch Reviews
WM Watch WM199 Review – Dual Crowns and Industrial Character in Steel
The WM Watch WM199 positions itself squarely within the rugged tool-diver category, but it does so with a configuration that immediately sets it apart: a dual-crown layout with an internal…
WM Watch WM211 Review – NH35 Full-Lume Diver with Architectural Edge
Fully luminous dials tend to divide opinion. They can feel gimmicky or, when executed properly, genuinely compelling. The WM Watch WM211 falls firmly into the latter category. Offered in three…
WM Watch WM244 Review – A Diver in Form, a Daily Beater Watch in Practice
The WM Watch WM244 arrives as a new addition to the brand’s lineup for 2025, presenting itself visually as a modern dive watch while occupying a more nuanced position in…
WM Watch WM175 Review – An Overengineered Budget Diver with Real Character
The WM Watch WM175 sits squarely in familiar territory: a stainless-steel dive watch powered by a proven automatic movement, offered at a budget price. On paper, the ingredients are expected—sapphire…
WM Watch WM226 Review – 39mm Sports-Lux Automatic “Glacier” Textured Dial
The WM Watch WM226 sits in the brand’s Glacier collection, a line built around textured dials and a contemporary sports-lux silhouette. Priced under $200 before tax, it targets the segment…
WM Watch WM200 Review – Exciting & Eccentric Titanium Diver
The WM Watch WM200 is what happens when imagination meets engineering restraint. It’s a titanium automatic diver with a personality straight out of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea — rugged,…
WM Watch WM216 Review – All The Essentials Plus Some
When you think of field watches, you expect practicality, legibility, and a no-nonsense build. The WM Watch WM216 delivers all of that — and then some. At around $130, this…
WM Watch WM212 Review – Solid Diver Watch Specs
The sea has always demanded respect — vast, unpredictable, and indifferent to human endurance. The WM Watch WM212 captures that spirit perfectly. It’s a diver’s watch built not merely for…
Featured Watch Reviews
Magnetism and Watches: What It Does, Why It Matters, and What “Anti-Magnetic” Really Means
Most people assume that if a mechanical watch stops keeping time properly, something must be broken. A worn gear. A slipping mainspring. A need for regulation. In reality, one of the most common causes of dramatic time gain in modern mechanical watches leaves no visible trace at all. No scratch …
What Actually Makes a Watch “Well Finished”?
If you spend enough time around watches, you’ll notice something interesting. People talk about movements. They argue about water resistance. They obsess over sapphire versus mineral crystal. But when someone handles a watch in person and says, quietly, “This feels well made,” they’re usually reacting to something else. They’re reacting …

















































