NOMOS Glashütte Club Campus deep pinkvsMaen Manhattan 40 MSD
The numbers, the dial colors, the calibers — laid out so you can stop flipping between tabs.
At a glance
17 of 29 specs differFull specifications
Case
7 specsCrystal & Dial
4 specsMovement
5 specsPricing
1 specsFollow this matchup
Get a note when NOMOS Glashütte Club Campus deep pink vs Maen Manhattan 40 MSD gets more votes, a community discussion, or a price drop. No account needed.
Owners + reviewers, side by side
Synthesized for each watch independently from owner discussions, enthusiast forums, written reviews, and video reviewers.
Owners widely praise the NOMOS Glashütte Club Campus deep pink for its vibrant, light-reactive fuchsia dial and Bauhaus design, with many highlighting its thin, comfortable wearability and smooth winding action. The watch is noted for excellent timekeeping, with some owners reporting accuracy within 2 seconds per day, though one owner experienced a deviation of 8 seconds per day. Reviewers and owners alike mention the dial's appeal, with some finding the orange seconds hand clashes with the pink, and a few owners find the long lugs challenging on smaller wrists. The highly polished case is noted to scratch easily, and some express disappointment with the closed caseback, particularly on the 36mm variant, while others find the small seconds sub-dial creates an unbalanced look. Overall, owners and reviewers find the NOMOS Glashütte Club Campus deep pink to be a value-driven, fun, and well-finished watch with a unique dial execution.
The Maen Manhattan 40 MSD is widely praised for its refined, architectural design, particularly its slim 9.6mm case, integrated bracelet that feels engineered as part of the case, and highly finished surfaces. Owners specifically highlight the stunning jade dial and the Midnight Blue dial's transformation in sunlight. The 70s-inspired integrated bracelet is noted as thin yet strong, and the 100m water resistance is a concrete feature. However, some enthusiasts find the 49.3mm lug-to-lug measurement too large for a retro-inspired rectangular watch, suggesting it wears large, while others with larger wrists appreciate the option, and some feel it wears smaller than its dimensions imply. The Sellita SW200 movement has a 38-hour power reserve, and the printed logo appears flat against the applied indices, with the integrated bracelet limiting strap change options.
More watches worth a look
Matched to the watches above on size, movement, style and price — microbrands first. Open any one to dig in.
People also compared
Comparisons nearby in the catalog — alternatives to the watches above paired against the matchup.










