Timex Just Elevated Its Most Unique Affordable Vintage Reissue

It’s even more ’70s than before.

Close-up of a gold Timex wristwatch showing part of the black dial with a day and date display reading "WED 14," a gold crown, and a portion of the gold bracelet.Timex

If you buy from a link, we may earn a commission. Learn more

Who doesn’t love a good mystery dial?

Somewhat popular in the mid-twentieth century but rather rare today, mystery dial watches feature hands that mysteriously “float” around the dial, with no clear attachment to any sort of mechanism that drives them.

Most mystery dials use center-mounted transparent discs to achieve this illusion, but Timex’s 1970s-era enigma and the modern-day reissue that debuted last year, use a simpler approach with hands painted to match the color of the dial save for their hi-vis tips, and a round sticker on the underside of the crystal that’s also the color of the dial.

Black Timex Quartz wristwatch with a minimalist design, featuring a dark face, silver hour and minute hands with white tips, a small red dot near the bottom, and a day-date display showing "WED 14" on the right side. The watch is set against a warm, blurred background with orange and brown tones.
The Q Timex Enigma creates the illusion that its hands are floating on the dial.
Timex

While the effect isn’t quite as mysterious as a mystery dial with transparent discs, the Timex still looks cool. And I must not be the only person who thinks so, because the brand just launched a new elevated version of the Q Timex Enigma.

Hidden treasure

The new Q Timex Enigma is exactly the same as the one launched last summer, save for one difference: gooooooolllld.

OK, it isn’t real gold, of course. The watch’s case and bracelet are made of stainless steel, and they’ve been given a gold-tone finish. Most of the time, I think gold-tone finishes look pretty tacky, but I actually like the way this looks. The black dial, floating red seconds dot and the dial’s gold text and markings all pair very nicely with the glitzier case and bracelet. Plus, the gold tone really ups the watch’s ’70s vibes, which is almost never a bad thing.

Gold-toned Timex Quartz wristwatch with a black dial, white hour and minute hands, and a red second hand, featuring a day and date display, worn on a wrist with a dark long sleeve.
Timex’s mystery watch just got a glow-up.
Timex

Outside of the flashy makeover, this is the same Enigma as before. That means we’re getting a retro 37mm polished cushion case, a quartz movement featuring a day-date complication at 3:00, an easily accessible battery hatch on the caseback, 50m of water resistance and a flat-link tapering bracelet with straight end links that closes via a proper folding clasp.

Do I still wish Timex would make this watch using an automatic movement and transparent disc-hands like it’s previously done on its Snoopy sports watches? Yes. Yes, I would. But this version is still pretty damn cool, too.

Side view of a gold Timex wristwatch with a metal link band and a polished bezel, set against a gradient brown and black background. The watch crown is centered on the side.
The gold tone adds even more ’70s vibes to the cushion case and flat-link bracelet.
Timex

As there’s no real gold involved, the Q Timex Enigma Gold costs the same as the plain steel version of the watch: $229. That does represent a $30 increase over the price of the watch when it debuted last year, however, which follows the trend of watches everywhere lately getting more expensive.

Gold-toned Timex Q Quartz wristwatch with a black dial, white hour and minute hands, a small red dot near the bottom, and a day-date display showing "WED 14." The watch has a gold metal link bracelet and a polished gold case.Timex

Timex Q Timex Enigma Gold

Specs

Case Size 37mm
Movement Quartz day-date
Water Resistance 50m
, ,