There's no engine turning, no cotes de geneve, not a bunch of interior and exterior angles, and most of the movement is actually hidden under the main bridge, etc. so I hate to try to make comparisons that x is better than y when I don't think there's a clear apples to apples comparison. Rather than do that, I'll just throw out some highlights which I think standout:
1. Fully finished hands, front, back, sides, no shortcuts taken
2. If it's polished, it's mirror polished, nothing is polished halfway. Little parts have little polished edges, big parts like the center bridge or the balance bridge have huge swathes of polish
3. The bezel is a mirror polished domed ring of titanium inset with mirror polished spheres for the markers, no ceramic or sapphire here
4. The pivoting lugs have a super fine brushed finish, so fine you can't see the grain, the lines are crisp, and play softly with the light. The bullet ends are hand finished/shaped and there is zero play in the pivoting mechanism.
Definitely try one on in person. There's so much metal work and finishing in the watches, no painted or stamped dials to hide behind, I think you need to see it in person to appreciate it and decided how much you like their aesthetic vs another.