Editorial
Universal Genève built its reputation on the Compax chronograph in the 1940s and 1950s, and the modern Compax Date is the brand's attempt to carry that lineage into current production. At 40mm with a clean dial layout and an ETA 2894-2 inside, it is a dress chronograph that wears its history without pretending to be something it is not. If you want the Compax name on your wrist today without hunting the vintage market, this is the straightforward path.
Universal Genève's original Compax was a column-wheel tri-compax chronograph that found its way onto wrists from the 1940s through the 1960s, powered by UG's own calibers and widely regarded as one of the more refined sports-dress pieces of that era. The brand changed hands multiple times through the late twentieth century and lost the technical independence that defined its golden period. The modern Compax Date, introduced with the brand's partial revival, uses an ETA 2894-2 base rather than any in-house movement.
It is honest about that fact and prices accordingly. The design references the original dial architecture without copying it directly, which is the right call.
The ETA 2894-2 is a capable and widely serviced automatic chronograph movement, but buyers expecting manufacture-level finishing or in-house cachet will be disappointed. Fit and finish on the case and dial has been inconsistent across production runs; inspect any example carefully, particularly around the pushers and the date window framing. The brand's retail presence is thin, which complicates pre-purchase comparisons and can make warranty service slower than you'd want.
Resale is soft because the brand lacks the collector floor that names like Heuer or Longines provide at the same price tier. Buy it because you want to wear it, not because you expect the market to reward you later.