Side by side

Fears Archival 1930vsPhoibos Apollo Titanium

The numbers, the dial colors, the calibers — laid out so you can stop flipping between tabs.

Archival 1930
FearsArchival 1930
MSRP $3,863
Apollo Titanium
PhoibosApollo Titanium
MSRP $575

At a glance

13 of 29 specs differ
Diameter
Archival 193040mm
Apollo Titanium41mm
Power Reserve
Archival 193040h
Apollo Titanium40h
Water Resistance
Archival 193030m
Apollo Titanium300m
MSRP
Archival 1930$3,863
Apollo Titanium$575

Full specifications

Case

7 specs
Category
Dress
Diver
Diameter
40mm
41mm
Thickness
8.54mm
12.5mm
Lug-to-Lug
48mm
Lug Width
20mm
22mm
Material
316L Stainless Steel
Titanium
Water Resistance
30m
300m

Crystal & Dial

3 specs
AR Coating
Inner
Yes
Dial Color
Standard
Green
Lume
None
Super-LumiNova

Movement

2 specs
Caliber
ETA 2360
Miyota 9015
Type
Manual
Automatic

Pricing

1 specs
MSRP
$3,863
$575

Follow this matchup

Get a note when Fears Archival 1930 vs Phoibos Apollo Titanium gets more votes, a community discussion, or a price drop. No account needed.

What people say

Owners + reviewers, side by side

Synthesized for each watch independently from owner discussions, enthusiast forums, written reviews, and video reviewers.

Fears Archival 1930

Owners and reviewers widely praise the Fears Archival 1930 for its elegant, vintage-inspired Art Deco styling, featuring a captivating champagne dial with Deco numerals and heat-blued hands. The watch is noted for its comfortable, thin 8.54mm case and surprisingly substantial wearability, even on smaller wrists, due to its curved caseback and light weight. Its pull-out crown is easy to grip and wind, and the use of a new old stock ETA 717 movement from the 1930s adds historical appeal. However, some owners and forum members question its value proposition, citing components like an ETA 7001 movement and a Hong Kong case, with a power reserve of 38-40 hours requiring frequent winding. On balance, owners and reviewers rate the Fears Archival 1930 highly for its unique vintage design and comfortable wearability, despite some reservations about its price relative to its components.

Phoibos Apollo Titanium

The Phoibos Apollo Titanium Dark Matter Blue is described as beautiful and unique, with one owner noting it as their first Chinese watch. One owner reports small marks on the case, bracelet, bezel, and case back, but otherwise finds the watch in very good condition. On balance, owners find the Phoibos Apollo Titanium to be a visually appealing and unique timepiece.

Keep exploring

More watches worth a look

Matched to the watches above on size, movement, style and price — microbrands first. Open any one to dig in.

Adjacent matchups

People also compared

Comparisons nearby in the catalog — alternatives to the watches above paired against the matchup.