A little perspective in size:
The Meopta B1 8x32 side by side with my former 8x32 Swarovski Pure NL. Brought my Meopta for a coffee/bino session and did a brief side by side yesterday.
The Meopta does not disappoint. On its own merits it has everything: compact size, excellent ergonomics, a great eye box and a slight "pop" in the imaging. It is not perfect but it is so good that you can simply use it for anything and it does really well.
As for the Swarovski: it does a few things better, the center resolution is a little better and the image is "calmer" when you look at things with some depth to them. Like a building at an angle where you can pick up CA on the Meostar more easily on the trim siding. Birds on a nearby antenna and a building crane a (short) km away are very crisp and no disturbing CA on either.
Very little fall off towards the edges compared to a Geco 8x32 which we also had at hand for a budget comparison.
The Geco is about as sharp/crisp and virtually CA free but there is a bit of tunnel vision and the image is quite flat and gray in comparison to the Meostar. Looking at the same crane the vignetting in the image / fall off towards the edges was a bit troublesome in the Geco. The Meostar keeps the whole crane in focus and the GECO is deteriorating faster towards the edges of the crane when centered.
In size, the GECO is a little larger than the Meopta. Almost the same but the GECO is more "square" and the Meopta more "tapered". I did not think to take a photo of the two together unfortunately. The GECO is a good size for my hands which made the comparison interesting to me.
Pure NL vs Meostar: tracing mono-chromatic outlines the Swarovski is very relaxing in its view. The Meopta is no slouch and even though it lags behind a little the difference is smaller than the price tag suggests. There is no doubt that the Pure NL is cleaner in the imaging - but it is also a little "gray" compared to the Meostar. Not by much and not disturbing.
I think that the side by side photo is very revealing: the size of the Pure NL hints at the lengths they had to go to to create that optical marvel. In light of that the Meostar is much more compact and I applaud Meopta for making such an easy-to-use and compact binocular that in imaging behaves like a "full sized binocular".
Out of the 8x32 binoculars on the market I think the Pure NL is perhaps the very best. But, at that size it is not as appealing to me as some of the competition.
My friend was also quite impressed with the Meostar. It has no significant drawbacks in use and it makes for a dependable and compact companion.
I took only one photo of the two binos side by side. Both are great in hand and the only advantage of the Meopta is the compact stow away size. Meostar fits my hands perfectly but the Pure NL has nothing against it in hand holding ergonomics. It feels a little awkward with the shape if you come from a "round tubed" binocular but I adjust quickly to it.