
Carbon Core Guard × Stealth Geometry
CasiOak.
Indestructible utility. Iconic octagonal bezel. $99.
Est. 1983 — Project Team Tough
The Triple 10.
Kikuo Ibe dropped 200+ prototypes from the third floor of Casio's R&D building in Hamura, Tokyo. The result: a standard no other watch has matched.

10m Drop
Survives impact from 10 meters. Carbon Core Guard monocoque structure integrates carbon fibers into fine resin for maximum tensile strength.

200m WR
Stainless steel caseback secured by 4 Phillips screws for 20 ATM water resistance. Swimming, surfing, snorkeling — no hesitation.

3-Year Cell
Module 5611 quartz: ±15 sec/month accuracy. Two SR726W batteries, DIY-replaceable. $0.05/day cost-per-wear over 5 years.
The $99
Royal Oak.
In 2019, Steven Davila noticed the octagonal bezel's resemblance to the $50,000+ Audemars Piguet Royal Oak — Gerald Genta's 1972 masterpiece. The "CasiOak" nickname was born. Within months, the GA-2100 sold out worldwide.
It democratized luxury design. It created the largest watch-modding ecosystem since the Seiko SKX007. It proved that virality in horology isn't about price.




Daily Rotation
Grab. Go. Forget It's There.


Summit Ready
10m drop resistance meets rugged terrain

Urban Stealth
45.4mm wears smaller than you'd expect

Daily Carry
The centerpiece of any EDC kit

Night Vision
Double LED Super Illuminator in the dark

The Mod Scene
One Watch.
Infinite Builds.
316L stainless steel conversion cases and integrated bracelets ($50–$150) transform the GA-2100 into a full Royal Oak homage. NATO adapters, custom resin straps, metal bezels — the aftermarket ecosystem is massive. Casio officially embraced the trend with the GM-2100 (metal bezel) and GM-B2100 (full metal).

Visual Exhibition
Carbon Architecture













Engineering
Materials & Engineering
Carbon Core Guard (Carbon Fiber-Reinforced Fine Resin)
Casio's proprietary monocoque case technology integrating carbon fibers into fine resin. The carbon fibers dramatically raise the tensile strength and modulus of elasticity of the case structure, allowing the GA-2100 to achieve an 11.8mm thickness — the thinnest analog G-Shock at launch — while maintaining full 10m drop impact resistance. Total case weight: 51g.
Superior strength-to-weight ratio eliminates the need for bulky external button guards, creating a clean geometric silhouette while maintaining G-Shock's legendary shockproof integrity.
Mineral Glass Crystal (Thermally Tempered Silica)
Flat mineral glass with Mohs hardness ~6. Thermally tempered for impact resistance — flexes under force rather than shattering like sapphire. Not scratch-proof, but replacement crystals cost ~$10.
Cost-effective and impact-absorbing — ideal for a $99 beater watch designed for daily abuse.
Polyurethane Resin Strap
Durable urethane polymer resistant to sweat, saltwater, UV radiation, and skin oils. Features quick-release spring bars. Known to last 5–10 years with daily wear before degradation.
Hypoallergenic and maintenance-free. The massive CasiOak modding ecosystem also offers aftermarket 316L stainless steel conversion cases and integrated bracelets ($50–$150).
Stainless Steel Caseback (Screw-Down)
Secured by 4 Phillips screws for 200m (20 ATM) water resistance. Houses two SR726W silver-oxide button cell batteries accessible for user replacement.
Robust seal for swimming, surfing, snorkeling, and recreational diving.
Premium Lineage: Cobarion® & DAT55G Titanium (MRG-B2100)
The luxury MRG-B2100 variant ($3,500+), hand-assembled at Yamagata Casio's Premium Production Line (PPL) by certified "Medalist" craftsmen, uses Cobarion® (cobalt-chromium alloy, 4× harder than pure titanium) bezels and DAT55G titanium (3× harder than pure titanium) bracelet links.
Demonstrates the CasiOak's evolution from a $99 beater to a full luxury platform.
Buyer's Guide
Buying Intelligence
Sizing & Fit
45.4mm × 48.5mm × 11.8mm at 51g — despite the case dimensions, the CasiOak wears significantly smaller than its specs suggest thanks to its ultra-thin 11.8mm profile, minimal lug overhang, and featherweight resin case. Comfortable on wrists from 5.5" up. For smaller wrists (<6"), consider the GMA-S2100 "Mini CasiOak" at 42.9mm.
Where to Buy
- **Retail:** Casio.com, Amazon ($80–$99, frequently discounted), Best Buy, department stores. Universally available. - **Pre-owned:** $50–$75 with very fast resale velocity. - **Grey market:** Most colorways at or below retail. Limited editions occasionally command 2–3× premiums.
Strap & Bracelet Options
- **OEM strap:** Integrated resin band in matching colorway with quick-release spring bars. - **Aftermarket:** The CasiOak mod ecosystem is the largest since the Seiko SKX007 — includes full 316L stainless steel conversion cases and bracelets ($50–$150) that transform it into a Royal Oak homage, NATO adapters, and custom resin straps in non-standard colors. Casio officially embraced the trend with the GM-2100 (metal bezel, 2021) and GM-B2100 (full metal, 2022).
Authenticity Check
Counterfeit GA-2100s are highly common. Key checks: (1) Three-Button Diagnostic Test — hold top-left, bottom-left, and top-right buttons simultaneously; genuine modules activate every LCD pixel and cycle through diagnostic menus. (2) Day dial center pin should be grey plastic, not copper-colored metal. (3) Bezel engravings ("G-SHOCK", "PROTECTION") should be deeply stamped and razor-sharp, not fuzzy or painted. (4) Hand-Shift Test — entering setting mode should sweep hands to 7:35 position.
Ownership
Total Cost of Ownership
5-Year Total Cost
$116
Cost Per Day
$0.06
for a Casio G-Shock GA-B2100 CasiOak on your wrist
At $99 retail, approximately $0.05/day over 5 years. One of the lowest cost-per-wear ratios in all of horology.
Heritage
Heritage & Culture
Casio Computer Co., Ltd. was founded in 1946 in Tokyo, Japan by Tadao Kashio and his brothers. Originally a consumer electronics company (first all-electric compact calculator, 1957), Casio entered watchmaking in 1974 with the Casiotron. G-Shock was created in 1983 by engineer Kikuo Ibe and his "Project Team Tough" — who dropped 200+ prototypes from the third floor of Casio's R&D building in Hamura, Tokyo, establishing the legendary "Triple 10" standard: 10m drop resistance, 10 ATM water resistance, 10-year battery life. Casio now ships over 100 million watches annually, with G-Shock surpassing 140 million units since 1983.
Notable Wearers
Awards & Recognition
- Hodinkee "Value Proposition" recognition — consistently cited as the best watch under $100.
- Multiple "Best Beater Watch" awards from Worn & Wound, GQ, Esquire, and TechRadar.
- Casio's fastest-selling analog G-Shock upon launch — sold out globally within weeks, creating grey-market premiums of 2–3× retail.
- The CasiOak modding community became the largest watch-modding community since the Seiko SKX007, spawning an entire aftermarket industry of 316L stainless steel conversion kits.
In Popular Culture
The "CasiOak" nickname was coined in 2019 by Steven Davila in the Scottish Watches Facebook group, noting the octagonal bezel's resemblance to the $50,000+ Audemars Piguet Royal Oak (Gerald Genta, 1972). Within months, the watch sold out worldwide with secondary prices reaching 2–3× retail. During 2020–2021 COVID lockdowns, it became the single most viral watch on TikTok and Instagram. The phenomenon was so explosive that Casio officially responded with the metal-covered GM-2100 (August 2021), full-metal GM-B2100 (August 2022), and the hand-assembled premium MRG-B2100 in Cobarion® and DAT55G titanium ($3,500+).
Honest Take
The Collector's Verdict
"A $99 quartz watch shouldn't matter to collectors — but the CasiOak does, for three reasons: (1) It democratized luxury design — the Royal Oak silhouette, arguably the most important watch design of the 20th century, became accessible to everyone. (2) It created the largest watch-modding ecosystem since the Seiko SKX007, with third-party manufacturers producing stainless steel conversion cases and bracelets. (3) It proved that virality in horology isn't about price — the CasiOak commanded more social media engagement than watches costing 500× more. High-end collectors (Rolex, AP, Omega owners) frequently keep a CasiOak as their dedicated beater."
Buy the G-Shock GA-B2100 CasiOak If…
- Anyone wanting an indestructible daily beater under $100 with serious design credibility
- Water sports enthusiasts — 200m WR with G-Shock shockproofing
- Watch modding enthusiasts — massive aftermarket ecosystem of metal conversion kits
- High-end collectors needing a dedicated beater alongside their luxury pieces
Skip the G-Shock GA-B2100 CasiOak If…
- Those who need easy low-light legibility — the stealth-black colorway has no lume whatsoever
- Mechanical watch purists who insist on an automatic or manual-wind movement
- Those who need a large, easy-to-read digital display — the LCD subdisplay is tiny
- —Stealth-black legibility deficit: The GA2100-1A1 has absolutely no Neobrite luminescent paint on hands or indices. Low-light readability is poor — you must rely entirely on the Double LED Super Illuminator.
- —Mineral glass scratches: Not sapphire. Daily beater use will accumulate minor scuffs over time. Replacement crystals are cheap (~$10) but require caseback removal.
- —Tiny digital subdisplay: The LCD window at 4:30 is small and genuinely difficult to read for anyone with less than perfect vision. The Hand-Shift feature (sweeps hands to 7:35 position to clear the LCD) helps but isn't a substitute for a full digital display.
- —Module 5611 is quartz: For mechanical-watch purists, this is a non-starter. For everyone else, it's a feature — better accuracy (±15 sec/month), no winding, no expensive servicing, and 3-year battery life.

140 Million Units Since 1983
Indestructible.
Secure the Casio G-Shock "CasiOak" — $144. The most culturally relevant watch under $100.