The 10 Most Difficult to Read Tokyoflash Watches

Quick: what time is it? If you can glance down at your wristwatch and figure it out in, oh say, less than two seconds, it may just be too easy for you. And that's a wasted opportunity to train your mind, my friend. Instead, wear a wristwatch that forces you to go to the equivalent of a mental gym whenever you want to know the time!

As timepieces go, the wristwatch has gone a long way since Patek Philippe created the first one in the late 1800s. It started out as jewelry for royalties, then evolved to fashion accessory, and finally to a mass-produced practical item. Now, thanks to the folks at Tokyoflash, watches can also be a symbol of geekdom!

This whole list got started when I asked our pals over at Tokyoflash what they consider as their most difficult watch to read - and by difficult, I mean whip out your calculator/disable a bomb/decrypt a cipher kind of difficult. They came back with a list of ten shown here.

To share the joy, they are generously offering a free Tokyoflash wristwatch to four lucky Neatorama readers (see below for details) ... but first, here are the Ten Most Difficult to Read Tokyoflash Watches:








































































1. Equalizer High Frequency 2

All right, let's start with an easy one: the new High Frequency 2, the second Tokyoflash watch to use an Equalizer theme. You've got to be quick to read the time: the display pushes up the top row of lights, which then float back down like an equalizer graph to indicate the time for just 5 seconds.

Technically speaking, High Frequency 2 is actually a pretty advanced watch: it is an advanced LCD that uses just 1 LED to light the entire watch, so its power consumption is very low.

  

2. e35 JLr7

Look carefully, and you'll find out why this watch, made by Eri & Eiichi or e35, is named the JLr7 (just look at the top row of the watch).

When you want to find what time it is, just press the button to watch a grid of L-shaped notches come to life. The hours, minutes, and seconds are encoded in a geometric pattern.

The first two rows, comprised of 12 lights, tell the hour. The next three lights are increments of 15 minutes, and the next 14 lights are 1 minute each. The last 3 are seconds (those tick by quickly!)

Here's a handy dandy cheat sheet on how to tell time with an e35 JLr7:

  

3. Oberon

This one is stylish and geeky! The Oberon watch uses concentric rings to tell the time. Each LED on the outer ring indicates 1 hour. The LEDs on the second ring are 1 minute each, and those on the inner (or third) ring are 10 minutes each.

Thankfully, the LEDs are positioned just like the numerals on a regular watch face, so it's really quite easy to tell the time.


4. e35 Geomesh

Let's step it up a notch: another watch by e35 is the Geomesh, where you have to count the vertical lights to figure out the hours and the horizontal lights for the minutes (either 5 minutes or 1 minute increments, depending on where the lights are).

Here's the chart:

Let's try to figure out the example on the left. There are 9 horizontal (green) lights, so it's 9 o'clock. 5 lights x 5 minutes each + 4 lights x 1 minute each = 29.

The time is 9:29. Pretty straight forward, right?

  

5. Eleeno Kion Elite

Just when you thought that there's a familiar clock hand pointing out the time, you've just underestimated the Kion Elite by Eleeno. If you look closer, you'll find that there's only ONE clock hand - and it's telling the minutes!

So how do we figure out the hour? Turns out, it's the background of the watch: the pattern will "point out" what hour it currently is (7:50 in the image above).

  

6. Tokyoflash 1000100101

If you look closely, you'll probably see this watch on a Sci-Fi movie from the 1960s about the future. Besides looking cool (the colored LEDs blink a LOT!), this watch will make you do math.

Every time you want to figure out what time it is, you have to do a mental arithmetic: The first LED is 10 hours, then the next 9 is worth 1 hour each. The next 5 are 10 minutes, then the last 9 are 1 minute each.

So, 11:35 is 1000+100+30+5. And who said you'll never use math in real life!

  

7. Radioactive Active Reactor

By now, you should already pick up a pattern: Tokyoflash watches want you to do math to figure out the time. Nothing fancy, just a little addition.

Active Reactor by Radio Active adds a little humor to the math: the hour is marked on the "Danger" bar (with the Warning button signifying the 6 hour mark.

Oh, and another thing. This watch you simply don't wear in an airport.

  

8. Shinshoku

The Shinshoku is a continuous stainless steel band that wraps around your wrist with a matrix of punched out holes. In what constitutes the front part of the band, the holes are filled with 29 LEDs that illuminate to tell the time.

In the multi-color version, 12 red LEDs indicate the hour, 3 green LEDs indicate quarter hours, and 14 yellow ones are 1 minute each. But first, as if the whole thing isn't cool enough, the lights cascade to make the final time-giving formation.

The watch above, for example, shows 8:35.

  

9. Kyokusen

In Japanese, kyokusen means curved line, which is a big part of the watch face. The line tells the hour part of the time: each lit segment of the curve indicates one hour.

The circular array of lights are the minutes. But here's the twist: each dot in the outer ring is 5 minutes, and the 4 inner dots are 1 minute each.

So, the watch to the left shows 10: 24.


10. Twelve 5-9 Q version

If a Cylon Centurion wore a watch, I betcha the Twelve 5-9 Q version would be it.

The watch just oozes that creepy cool "biomechanical" feel: the watch face has a contoured undulating effect. Peering through five tiny strips are 26 very bright multi-colored LEDs.

Like its name implies, the watch uses the 12-5-9 method (12 hours, 5x10 minutes, 9 single minutes) to tell the time. Moving clockwise, the first two lines of the LEDs show the hours. The next line is the minutes up to 50, with each glowing LED showing 10 minutes. The final two lines are the single minutes, with one LED for each minute.

Got it? We didn't either ... but it sure looks cool!


Get a Free Tokyoflash Watch

Now, the bit you've all been patiently waiting for. The good people at Tokyoflash are sponsoring this giveaway. A Tokyoflash watch of your choice can be yours, absolutely free. All you have to do is this:

1. Go to www.tokyoflash.com
2. Find out how many watch models are currently available for purchase in the Twelve 5-9 series
3. Email your answer to neatorama@tokyoflash.com, along with which Tokyoflash watch you would like to win (except for the high-end Seiko and Independent brands). Optional: increase your chance of winning by including your Neatorama username (not a user? It's easy to register.)

Four winners will be chosen at random on January 31, 2008. At least two of these winners will be a registered user of Neatorama. Good luck!

Update 1/22/07: Wow! Thanks for the response, guys - please subscribe to Neatorama's RSS Feed or visit our homepage for updates on this contest. If you've just seen it now, you're not too late - you have until January 30, 2008 to enter! (Winners will be announced on January 31, 2008). Update 1/23/07: Two clarifications from Tokyoflash (Thanks for the questions, Kyle SS!): - Entrants can select any watch they like to win from the entire watches page, inclusive of all brands not just the "Tokyoflash brand". This does not include the designs in the watch museum though because these are quite old and are no longer in production. - Winners can choose a watch design or color/material that is currently sold out. The majority will come back into stock. However, some won't - and also the company can't say exactly when the design will come back into stock. For example, Oberon just sold out. They know that this will come back into stock in mid-March so thats fine, but they can't say for every watch. The best thing is for you is to choose which watch you ideally want from the entire range (except for the high-end Seiko and Independent brands), then if it's not currently available Tokyoflash will let you know if and when it will come in, or if it will take too long, you can select a different style. Update 1/26/08: TokyoFlash just added two new brands to their line-up that have to be excepted from this little competition: the Seiko and Independent brands. Update 1/31/08: Here are the winners - Thanks for playing, everyone! Update 2/1/08: Here's a coupon code for 1500 yen ($14 or 7GBP) discount off your Tokyoflash purchase until February 15, 2008: NEAT8

Damn, that Oberon is SWEET! It's MIIIINE!!! I'll just win that contest and smile as I tell the time to confused faces...frankly it's the most readable one ^^*
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
My friend had a watch like this and it was awesome. I think he bought his in Japan though. I asked him what time it was and he showed me and I said nevermind. D:
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Tokyoflash watches have always intrigued me but I've never gotten round to buying one.

Hopefully the Kion Elite will be mine :). Great competition Neatorama!
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
The Oberon seems the easiest to read but I guess the point is having a watch that you can read while leaving other people slightly confused... I wonder how long it would take to be able to read the time from the others in an instant.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Awesome contest.

I bet most of the watches you could read pretty quick after wearing it for a week or two. I like the Active Reactor and the Shinshoku.

The Shinshoku looks like something everyone will be wear in the future. If I win it, I'll be in the future! O_O
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
I have never seen these watches before. I hope I will win the Tokyoflash 1000100101. The Tokyoflash 1000100101 Black is even better but it is coming soon.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
2. Find out how many watches are currently available for purchase in the Twelve 5-9 series

Is that, how many watches in the series are in stock? How many current models are for sale?
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Yeah for another cool Neatorama contest.

But really folks, who in this day and age still wears a watch (and more importantly why)?

My computers, every device in my kitchen, every music playing device in my house and on my person, every video playing device in my house and on my person, the house phones, my alarm clock, my cell phone, my car, my car music system, my running computer, my bike computer, and my laptop ALL show the time (and most of them sync with NTP). You can't swing a dead cat and NOT hit something that isn't displaying the time.

So why oh why oh why would I want to strap a one-function VERY REDUNDENT watch onto my wrist?
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
VonSkippy, well some people aren't surrounded by technology. plus some watches tell the date, which lots of people forget.

but, i don't mind you not entering, just gives me a better chance of winning ^_^
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
VonSkippy--

A watch is a lot more subtle to look at without obviously checking the time when in class (since I-- and actually a surprising number of others-- don't use a laptop for notes). Many of my classes are small enough that the professor would notice me digging my cell phone out of my backpack (or in other places, without digging it out of my purse). Watches are also jewelryish and can add a nice accent aesthetically while providing a function.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
I bought two of their watches several years ago. One stopped working a within a few months. Although they look cool, the watches are thick and heavy and difficult to tell time in the outside daylight.

I'm really over them.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
@ ALex - It's on the front page now. We broke geeks love chances a free cool stuff

I 'digg' the Oberon of those listed here. I also love the 1000100101 & Twelve 5-9 G version IP Black

I'll enter [thanks for the opportunity | neatorama & Tokyo Flash] but I seem to have bad karma when it comes to contest - I just don't win, not for a lack of trying though. =D
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Thanks ClassicQ - it had more than 150 diggs after 24 hours and didn't get on the frontpage, so I didn't think it was going to ever make it. Thanks digg and diggers!

Tennez: 3? Really? I think you're trying to thin out the competition by giving out, um, suspicious info!

Sh0kth3rapy: As I understand it, you can choose any watch you'd like to win from the entire Tokyoflash collection.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
I just sent in an entry, and I'm hoping like heck that I win. I was completly amazed by the shinshoku, and it would be awesome if I won, being that I am too young to work and completly broke.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
I have a job, just not $150 I could drop on a really cool watch. Woot! The Radioactive Active is clearly the best thing since watches were invented. Any time after noon, I could go into work and start shouting, "OH NO! IT'S ABOUT TO GO NUCLEAR!" Ahhh. The fun. Hoping for the best on the thirty-first. :-D
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
never having heard of tokyoflash before i'm very impressed with the unique aesthetic of these watches. i really hope i win; i've got my eye on the kyokusen! :)
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Well, I hardly ever enter contests, but I entered this one. You all with your Oberon fetishes, I went for the Geoflash. C'mon, its odd, its cool looking and probably the hardest one to decipher. Plus it reminds me of Battlestar Galactica for some reason.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
I am somewhat of a collector of watches. I do not have anything in my collection that even COMPARES to the tokyoflash watches. They are amazing, and some are very hard to read. But hey- that's half the fun isn't it?
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
S-r-ex, rule #2 says "how many watch models are CURRENTLY AVAILABLE", which leads me to believe that coming soon models don't count.

However, the NUMBER of currently available watches for that model has changed since the contest began (as you pointed out earlier).

I guess that entries from January 23rd and sooner should have the first answer, and answers from January 24th and after should have the second answer since that's the only way I could imagine this being a fair contest.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Good question, S-r-ex. It's the number of currently available watch (so coming soon models don't count). However, you're right that the number actually changed today.

So, I asked Tokyoflash to clarify: they said that the right answer will obviously depend on WHEN you enter the contest. :)
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
I have one for years (the radioactivity one), it just take a day to be used to the reading, after that, it's pretty fast and obvious to tell the time. Don't be afraid of novelty :)
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Here's another question:

"At least two of these winners will be a registered user of Neatorama."

If 4 neatorama users were picked in the drawing, would they all be winners? (I'm leaning towards "yes" but would like confirmation)
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Update 1/26/08: Seiko and Independent brand watches are excepted (these were added just yesterday, days after the contest started).

@Jimmy Jones: If 4 neatorama users were picked in the drawing, would they all be winners? (I’m leaning towards “yes” but would like confirmation)

You got that right! The first two winners are picked completely at random from the entire pool. The next two are picked only from the registered user pool. So, by being a registered user of the blog, you're increasing your chances of winning.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
I have a question I sent in my response of the currently available Twelve 5-9 series watches, which I figured meant those currently available i.e. not the coming soon watches.

Do those coming soon models count as you can preorder? If so should I update my answer? Hope to hear back soon as I have high hopes of victory.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Damn! I just sent in my answer...picking the Seiko Moving Design. Then I came back here and refreshed the page. Damn! Damn! Damn!

Oh, well. Oberon it is, then. \:^ D

I love Tokyoflash watches but never had the disposable income to blow on 'em.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Such a though choice deciding on which watch to pick. I love all of the designs, but the Oberon and the Eclipse are calling out to me.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
I have the radioactive watch and i love it! in fact, i just flew from ohio back to california yesterday wearing it. i never even thought of it seeming strange to take to an airport. i guess they don't even glance at the jewelry in the little bowls as long as it doesn't look strange in the scanner. also, i've had it for over a year and have had no problems with battery or function, and i do have a lot of fun with it. it *is* pretty bulky and heavy, especially on a female wrist though.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
I also got an email that I won! I was leaning towards the Shinshoku, but ended up choosing the oberon. I hope this deal is for real. looks like a cool watch! I used to wear a disney goofy watch that actually ran backwards. I always chuckled when someone asked me the time and it took me awhile to figure it out.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
bummmmmmmmer.

oh well, i really thought i might win, i didn't get an e-mail, but then again only 2 people have confirmed winning.

so, now that the contest is over, what was the answer?

i did it when it first started, and i picked 4.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Please don't hate me.... I just signed up for the contest and registered with neatorama yesterday. I have been addicted to this blog for weeks now. I check it throughout the day, even on my cell phone. I hadn't joined yet, cuz all I would be able to comment is how awesome this blog is!

and these watches are so friggin cool!
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
I'm a daily lurker around here for quite a while but registered yesterday because of this contest aswell. Really cool watches from tokyoflash aswell as Neatorama is.. well.. neat.

No mail for me too though.. oh well i guess i have to collect some money and just buy one of those awesome watches
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Received my oberon yesterday :) Very happy with it. Seems to be very solid. Was even set to the correct time/date! as the hours / minutes grow, it takes some time to count them, but it is cool. when you hit the button, it sweeps all of the lights, then the extra lights go off to display the current time. I was going to make a video of it, but was sick yesterday. I will try to capture it today or tomorrow.

Thanks, Neatorama, and of course thanks tokyoflash.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Check the new expensive watch from TokyoFlash. It's wierd thou...

http://wrist-watch-reviews.blogspot.com/2009/01/pimpin-aint-easy.html
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
you can also visit www.storageclothing.co.uk where the whole range is displayed. I bought a Kisai watch and all my friends are thrilled on seeing it. cheers
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
I like these watches. It's not really hard to read, just some getting use to. I order the Tokyoflash B Version one online at 100milligrams.com! Can't wait to get in!
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Login to comment.
Click here to access all of this post's 105 comments




Email This Post to a Friend
"The 10 Most Difficult to Read Tokyoflash Watches"

Separate multiple emails with a comma. Limit 5.

 

Success! Your email has been sent!

close window
X

This website uses cookies.

This website uses cookies to improve user experience. By using this website you consent to all cookies in accordance with our Privacy Policy.

I agree
 
Learn More