The popular Taiwanese musician also directed and starred in the Tudor Royal commercial
The word 'royal' was first used by Tudor in the 1950s to reflect the superior quality of its watches. The new Tudor Royal range is part of this heritage of automatic sport-chic watches that are affordable but uncompromising in performance. Cutting-edge technical performance and refined aesthetics—think distinctive notched bezel, integrated bracelet—are the heart of this range that is offered in 28mm, 34mm, 38mm and 41mm respectively, with nine different dials including champagne or blue.

Above 41mm Tudor Royal in two-toned steel with a day indicator at 12 o'clock

Above 38mm Tudor Royal in steel and yellow gold

Above 34mm Tudor Royal in two-toned steel

Above 28mm Tudor Royal with gem-set mother-of-pearl dial
In the commercial, I wanted to express the idea that the watch can be both static and active, to play piano and to fight. It's the epitome of balance, elegance and versatility.
The integrated five-link bracelet is satin-brushed and polished, and appears in either 316L stainless steel or 316L stainless steel and yellow gold. The dial is given a sophisticated sun-brush finishing, with time-reading made easy with bold Roman numerals and baton hands coated in Superluminova. The bezel features notches with alternating polished surfaces and cut grooves.
The 41mm version is noteworthy for its day indicator at 12 o'clock. Living up to its tag as a sports watch you can swim laps with, the watch boasts a water-resistance of up to 100m.
Tudor brand ambassador Jay Chou launched the Tudor Royal collection in Taipei recently in a press event that was telecast virtually around the region. During the event, Chou also debuted the Tudor Royal commercial that he directed and starred in.
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