Read through to the end — the movement details, finishing notes, market context, and sourcing references are all further down.
The New Omega Super Series Moon Dark Face sits in a part of the superclone market where build quality variation between production runs is significant — and the difference between a well-sourced piece and a catalogue listing shows most clearly after the first month of regular wear rather than on the day of delivery. This review is based on the specific build characteristics of this reference rather than the factory marketing sheet.
The 44mm case is built in stainless steel, following the original reference geometry across lug width, case band, and crown placement without the dimensional shortcuts that lower-tier production accepts.
The tachymeter bezel functions as the chronograph's primary measurement tool — the scale is engraved or printed to reference specification, and the legibility holds under the lighting conditions a working chronograph encounters. On a properly sourced build the definition is sharp enough to read accurately at arm's length, which is where cheaper alternatives typically fail.
The anti-reflective coating on the crystal creates the dial depth that cheaper builds lose under direct light, where an uncoated crystal reflects back and flattens the visual effect.
The running, case clean, finishing on point. drives the chronograph complication — pusher action, reset behaviour, and column wheel or cam engagement are the three criteria that separate a well-executed chronograph superclone from one that looks correct but feels imprecise. The function has been regulated for daily accuracy, not just factory demonstration.
The 50m water resistance rating handles rain and incidental water contact reliably — suited to the daily wear conditions the watch will actually encounter.
The leather strap suits the dressed character of this reference — the material choice complements the case finishing and positions the watch correctly in formal and business contexts. The strap taper follows the lug width proportions of the genuine reference, which is the detail that most clearly affects how the watch sits at the wrist.
The exhibition caseback provides a direct view of the movement architecture — rotor finish, bridge layout, and plate decoration are all visible, and on a well-sourced build these elements confirm the quality of what is inside the case rather than just what is presented on the exterior.
Buyers who have considered both the Co-Axial and standard automatic versions of this reference will find the movement regulation standard higher on the Co-Axial build — the escapement architecture genuinely affects long-term rate consistency.
Who This Reference Suits
This piece suits the buyer who has worn enough superclones to have specific criteria rather than general preferences — someone who evaluates a watch on movement regulation, finishing consistency, and reference accuracy rather than on packaging or first impressions. If that describes your approach to this category, this build justifies the attention.
Market Context
Higher-grade sourced examples of this reference generally circulate in the $750–950 range among informed buyers. Well-sourced examples of this reference circulate at this tier of the collector market — the positioning reflects the movement specification, finishing quality, and overall build standard rather than the brand name alone. This figure is a market reference estimate for research purposes — ARFWatches does not sell or transact products directly.
Collector discussions and updated sourcing references for this build are active at ARFWatches — the community tracking for this reference is more current there than anywhere else.
Editorial Disclaimer: ARFWatches.com is an independent watch review and collector research platform. This page does not constitute an offer to sell any product. All market pricing figures are editorial estimates based on collector community data. Readers are responsible for ensuring compliance with the laws of their jurisdiction.
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