Skip to main content

What we want the Apple Watch to be in 2023

Here's our list of ways the biggest tech company in the country can improve its watch game this year

In 2014, Apple announced it was going to release its version of the activity tracker but branded it as a fashion accessory. The goal was to make a stylish watch that could complete any ensemble easily and keep track of the wearer’s fitness and health status. Not long after its release, the Apple Watch seemed to pigeonhole itself as a fitness tracker and somehow lost the original goal of being a fashion accessory. If you’re looking to buy a new Apple Watch for men, you should be aware that there aren’t many options for different Apple Watch bands or Apple Watch faces.

Along with a few other issues that the Apple Watch has faced in the last near-decade of development, there are some other ways they can step up their game in 2023. Here’s our list of ways the biggest tech company in the country can improve its watch game this year.

A man taps on an Apple Watch on his wrist
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Focus on style

First and foremost, we would love to see Apple take its watch back to its original goal and focus on style. At the moment, buying an Apple Watch is about function, not fashion. This is an excellent way of saying that if you want to track your health and fitness, you can’t care about how it looks. This year, it would be beneficial for everyone if Apple could move back to that original goal and make these watches as stylish as they are helpful.

Recommended Videos

There are a couple of ways the company could make these style improvements. The first is that Apple could offer new faces, preferably ones that resemble some of the more popular or famous watches. Downloading a watch face that looks like a traditional watch is a quick fix for its lack of style.

The second way to improve style is to offer multiple bands. When you buy an Apple Watch, you need to search for a watch band that you can wear with anything. They’re also a bit cumbersome to switch out, so making the bands easier to swap could be a valuable update.

Top-down view of an Apple Watch on a wrist
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Expand availability

One of the top complaints about nearly all Apple products is that they need to play better with others. If you buy an iPhone, then you need to get an iPad or a MacBook. Without those, the technology won’t play nicely. We get it — forcing customers to buy other big-ticket items if they want them to work together is great for the bottom line. The problem is the watch doesn’t necessarily need to work with a computer or iPad. While it’s great that it speaks the same language as your iPhone, it’s a huge letdown if you’re a devoted Android user.

Buying a fitness tracker is about making your life more enjoyable. It’s about tracking your fitness progress and tracking your health metrics so you can stay around longer. If Apple doesn’t make its watch play well with other brands and work with any app you want to download, then people will likely move on to, say, the Samsung Galaxy.

Close-up of an Apple Watch
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Update the casing

From the moment Apple released the Apple Watch, the casing has been an unmistakable shape. It’s a large and bulky square every time. Traditional watches run the gamut of available shapes and sizes. It would be a great addition to the line if you could get something rectangular, square, or the most traditional, round. A round casing with an elegant watch face on the background could transform the Apple Watch into a watch you wish you had while never losing the benefits of a fitness tracker.

So why wouldn’t Apple do these things? Well, Apple is, first and foremost, a brand. The brand has recognition, and everything from the bands to the casings are recognizable. While the ideas we’ve suggested here would be hits among the rest of the non-Apple Watch people, brand recognition is sometimes much more valuable. In any case, we know that Apple will come out with a new gizmo to entice the faithful to drop a mortgage payment on a new Apple Watch.

Mark D McKee
Mark is a full-time freelance writer and men's coach. He spent time as a style consultant and bespoke suit salesman before…
Topics
Zenith Chronomaster original debuts handsome midnight blue dial variant
Vintage modern: Zenith's chronomaster original blue dial honors 1969 a386 legacy
New Chronomaster Original from Zenith

Zenith offers the first blue dial model of its Chronomaster Original, expanding the group that follows the 1969 A386 El Primero. This watch sells for CHF 9,900, EUR 10,400, or USD 10,300. The midnight blue watch combines older looks with the modern El Primero 3600 movement that measures time to a tenth of a second.
The year 1969 made watchmaking history when the first automatic chronograph movement came out. Zenith's El Primero caliber, a fast, complete chronograph, became the first to finish among other makers. The round A386 watch, with its three-color counters, became the brand's main model that showed Zenith's chronograph past.
The Chronomaster Original, which came out in 2021, acts as the A386's real follower, not just a copy. This good mix of old details and new function keeps the small 38mm case size and three-color sub-dials. These parts copy the first sizes while holding the newest El Primero 3600 movement.
The midnight blue dial creates a good blend—it mirrors the blue outer scale, the date window frame, and the date disc for color matching. The blue, grey, and silver counters lie slightly on top of each other. They have a spiral finish that stands out against the sunray-brushed blue dial.
Older style shows through the correct fonts and logos that match the first watch. It also has raised, cut, and lit hour markers. The trapezoid date window at 4:30, the double outer scale, the white stick hands with black parts and glowing material, and the bright red central chronograph seconds hand keep true to its past.
The El Primero 3600 caliber works better than the first movement—it runs at 5Hz. The Chronomaster Original records times to a tenth of a second as the red central chronograph hand goes around every 10 seconds. The first tachymeter scale gives way to precise tenth-second marks on the edge.
Fast work changes sub-dial details, with all counters reading to 60. Small seconds appear in the light grey sub-dial at 9 o'clock. The 60-minute counter sits in the dark grey sub-dial at 6 o'clock. The 60-second elapsed times show in the blue sub-dial at 3 o'clock.
Digital scans of the 1969 watch led case building, making sure of the real 38mm size with a sloped side, sharp cut lugs, pump pushers, and mixed brushed and shiny parts. The very thin edge keeps original sizes. Newer additions include curved sapphire glass on the front and back.
The El Primero 3600 appears through the 12-sided caseback edge. It keeps a column wheel and flat parts while offering a 60-hour power hold and a stop-seconds function. The open rotor shows the new movement's blue column wheel and open bridges.
Each watch has a three-link stainless steel band and a blue calfskin strap with folding locks, offering options for different wearing events.

Read more
These new Panerai watches are as tough as they are beautiful
Panerai’s latest Luminor watches: Nautical precision in matte titanium
Panerai up close with black background

Panerai presents timepieces showcasing lightweight titanium cases with a distinctive matte grey finish, offering exceptional resistance against corrosion for extended durability. The understated yet premium aesthetic makes these watches versatile enough for professional diving and formal occasions, proving that high-performance tool watches can offer a sophisticated look.

Luna Rossa's clean, regatta-ready design

Read more
Ulysse Nardin dazzles with blast sparkling rainbow high jewelry limited edition
Ulysse nardin's blast sparkling rainbow features mystery-set sapphires
Ulysse Nardin Sparkling Rainbow Liminited Edition

Ulysse Nardin transforms its avant-garde Blast collection into spectacular high jewelry territory with the Blast [Sparkling Rainbow], an eight-piece limited edition priced at CHF 451,700 that fuses haute horlogerie with gem-setting artistry. The timepiece showcases 211 rainbow-colored sapphires totaling 13.33 carats across the entire watch construction.
The original Blast collection, introduced in 2020, drew inspiration from stealth aircraft design to marry high function with unconventional aesthetics, establishing Ulysse Nardin's reputation as avant-garde icon. This high jewelry interpretation elevates that foundation through unprecedented gem-setting complexity while maintaining the collection's distinctive architectural language.
Central to the technical achievement sits the in-house UN-172 skeletonized movement featuring flying tourbillon, silicon escapement, and platinum micro-rotor visible at 12 o'clock. Operating at 18,000 vibrations per hour with 72-hour power reserve, the caliber demonstrates Ulysse Nardin's silicon innovation expertise dating to 2001's legendary Freak timepiece.
The 45mm white gold case receives invisible setting treatment across 211 individually selected sapphires cut into 85 unique shapes. This rainbow spectrum creates seamless gradient effect encircling the entire watch while employing "mystery setting" technique that allows light passage through gems, creating floating stone illusions without visible metal frameworks.
Gem-setting complexity extends beyond case architecture to encompass bezel, dial, crown, and clasp applications, ensuring complete chromatic coverage across every visible surface. The rainbow arrangement requires precise color matching and graduated placement to achieve the seamless transition effects that define the piece's visual impact.
Construction challenges multiply when combining high jewelry techniques with complex movement architecture. The skeletonized dial must accommodate both sapphire setting requirements and tourbillon visibility while maintaining structural integrity and shock resistance expected from luxury sports watches.
The integrated white rubber strap and deployant clasp receive matching sapphire applications, completing the rainbow aesthetic while ensuring practical wearability. Despite extensive gem setting, the watch maintains 50-meter water resistance, demonstrating successful integration of jewelry and timepiece functionality.
Limited production to eight pieces emphasizes exclusivity while highlighting the intensive handwork required for each example. The mystery setting technique demands exceptional gem-setting expertise, with each sapphire requiring individual cutting and placement to achieve the floating effect.
This release continues Ulysse Nardin's tradition of pushing horological boundaries through unconventional materials and techniques. The brand's silicon escapement innovations combine with high jewelry craftsmanship to create timepieces that challenge traditional luxury watch categories.
The CHF 451,700 pricing reflects both the extensive gemwork and limited availability, positioning the piece among the most exclusive offerings in Ulysse Nardin's contemporary catalog. Eight-piece production ensures immediate collector status while showcasing the manufacture's high jewelry capabilities.

Read more