The Casio F-91W is a watch that probably won't impress you - and that's where its charm lies. If your main expectation from a watch is that it tells the time, wakes you up with an alarm and possibly allows you to track how long you've been cooking pasta or holding your breath, then that's exactly what you'll get. No unnecessary, no complexity - just the essentials. Most importantly, it works reliably. The best? The battery lasts about 7 years. Really. One little button torch and you have peace of mind for years. You don't have to charge anything, you don't have to watch the percentages - you just wear them and they work. And when you pull them out of the drawer years later? It's still running. Not many electronics can do that these days. Yes, the glass is plastic and scratches almost immediately if you look at it crookedly. But that's the advantage. This watch costs around 500 CZK. So if they get scratched, drowned (on a deep dive) or simply destroyed, you simply get new ones. No stress, no big loss. No need to save it - it's a watch you just use. And what may surprise you - the Casio F-91W is the best-selling watch in the world. Not because they are the most modern or the most luxurious, but because they simply do what they are supposed to do. They tell the time, are reliable and unpretentious. They are worn by students, workers, adventurers and those who just want something that works. So if you're looking for a watch that doesn't complicate your life, but simply tells you what time it is - and does so reliably and unobtrusively - the Casio F-91W is a great choice. FunFacty: I used to: Barack Obama, "Ear Bin Ladim", Mark Zuckerberg, Ryan Gosling.
Widely used in films, you can find them e.g. v: Captain Marvel, Breaking Bad, The End of the Fing World, The Wolf of Wall Street, Stranger Things, American Made, White House Down, The Hurt Locker, Short Term 12, Locke, Good Time
The thing I love most about them is that the originals cost slowly less than the "fakes". I think everyone should have them (at least in a drawer, just in case they break. )