Editorial
The Sub 200 is the most accessible DOXA diver, carrying the brand's orange dial and unidirectional bezel at a price that doesn't require a long wait or a premium budget. It delivers 200m of water resistance and a proven movement in a 42mm case that wears well without demanding attention. For anyone curious about DOXA, this is the honest starting point.
DOXA built its dive watch reputation starting in 1967 with the Sub 300, a watch that introduced the orange dial as a genuine safety feature for visibility underwater. The Sub 200 arrived as a modern entry point, keeping the design language intact while stepping down in depth rating and price relative to the deeper Sub 300 and 600 lines. The 799.10.351.10 uses the ETA 2824-2, a movement DOXA has relied on across its accessible tier for decades.
It sits in a 42mm steel case, a size that threads between the original 300's proportions and contemporary oversized sport watches. The Sub 200 is not a heritage reissue or a limited edition; it is the brand's answer to the question of how to bring DOXA to a broader collector.
The 200m water resistance rating is honest for recreational diving but leaves headroom well below the Sub 300 or 600 if serious depth is the goal. The ETA 2824-2 is reliable and widely serviced, though buyers expecting a proprietary or high-beat movement will need to adjust expectations. Orange dials are a preference, not a universal.
The Sub 200 commits fully to the color in a way that limits pairing to casual or sport contexts. Case finishing on this reference is brushed and functional rather than refined, which suits the tool watch brief but may not satisfy collectors who prioritize surface quality. Pre-owned examples sometimes show crown wear, a common pressure point on entry-level divers that see actual use, so inspect that area carefully.