Dan S
·As noted above, the price seems absurd relative to other similar models, and personally I find it silly and unappealing. But if you have to have it ... it's worth it to you.
Or this is a normal 1861 with replaced dial?
Entirely true. It's an impossible question.
What I have shown are watches I own that are excellent quality and are visually attractive at much lower costs. There could be countless other examples, but the point is made that there are excellent examples for less money. But, because this is also subjective, what does that prove?
I would spend 15k on an Omega 35th Apollo-soyuz meterorite watch before I would spend 9k on a Snoopy at retail. So no, the Snoopy is not worth 15k. Someone else might disagree. I think the Snoopy is a great watch. But we have to make choices without an unlimited budget. Buy it if you like it, but don't think everyone is going to give you 15k for it. If that's what you want, keep your 15k in cash.
Yes.
MSRP is 11200 usd, it was 10600 before May increase. They seem to be becoming more available, my OB got at least two this year, mine and @midlifegoals both. Neither of us waited too long either.
These are great responses, thank you!

Snoopys are naff. I’ve never seen the appeal. Same with the James Bond branded Seamasters.
I can’t understand how a full grown adult wants a cartoon dog or fictional spy on their watch?
The Gemini 4, Rising Sun or ST1 are the best modern speedmasters if you want something a bit different from a standard Moonwatch imo
IYKYK.
Meh. I had one and moved it on. The lume was nowhere near as impressive as your pics suggest and the all brushed finish was totally impractical for a tool watch.
As for the Snoopy. I got the call from a boutique a month ago. I passed.
Omega received a Snoopy award and rightfully proud. Creating Snoopy watches is a celebration of their small part in that massive effort, and it's a way to make their customers a part of it.
While Snoopy has a deeper meaning, only the diehard Omega fans and some historians know the connection and reason. To the broad audience, Snoopy is a cartoon character.