Heck yeah I like watches. Co-workers used to ask me why, when cell phones are so prevalent. But, I don't have a smart phone, and I noticed they would always ask me what time it was the few seconds a day they weren't glued to theirs.
This Casio G-shock is 20+ years old, I still wear it when shooting, kayaking, or working outside.
Before I retired, I used these two manual wind Chinese watches. Both of them have sapphire crystal faces and backs. Over the years I have come to prefer arabic numerals and no date:
My sporty casual watch is a Glycine sub:
I guess I don't have pictures of the two I were most often these days since I retired. A Casio Pathfinder (I think they changed that to Pro-Trek) PAW 2000, because I'm lazy. Solar battery, syncs via radio wave with the atomic clock each night, always ready to go when I wear it once a week. For the rare social occasion, a Grand Seiko Spring Drive. Somebody is always willing to argue (and I am not

), but most watch people consider it the first really new movement since the quartz watch.
A Week On The Wrist: The Grand Seiko Spring Drive Snowflake SBGA211
I have a couple of others, but I'm getting embarrassed by how much stuff I have.