Just got a sample of this lens, entitled "100mm F2.8 CA-Dreamer Macro 2X" no less. This is a manual focus lens made for various mounts; Nikon F, Z, Pentax, Sony E, Canon EF (the latter with electronic-controlled aperture). I obtained an F-mount version.
It weighs a substantial 685g and is all metal casing, with a good exterior finish like shown by other recent Laowa lenses. The surface is satin black and they have the 'blue ring' -their trademark- in the front section of the barrel. A low-profile 67mm "UV" filter is included, and so is a plasticky lens hood.
The focusing is rather stiff yet precise. Unfortunately, the rotation of the focusing ring to go from infinity to near limit is just 90 degrees thus the lens needs to be focused very carefully. As the image thanks to the fairly bright f/2.8 aperture snaps into focus pretty decisively, I for one had little problem putting focus where I wanted.
The optical design is complex with 12 elements in 10 groups and there are two ED glass elements to boost performance. Their literature speaks of "APO performance" which probably is the idea of their PR department. Likewise, the superior performance expected by their labelling the lens "CA-Dreamer" is not perfectly manifested. Some residual CA is plainly visible, although it must be said Nikon's own Micro-Nikkor lenses tend to do the same or worse. The LAOWA is no match for the CV 125mm f/2.5 APO-Lanthar in this respect, yet in terms of sharpness it is pretty good. How good exactly, and whether the impression of a nice bokeh is for real, remains to be investigated in further shooting. All I had time for now, being tied up in writing these days, was some cursory testing. Read the above with that caveat in mind.
I will report more in depth later, but any NG members having this lens are free to chip in with their experiences of course. Any addition of another decent lens for close-up work is highly welcomed. The playing field isn't that extensive, and this not very expensive lens could be the answer many users would be seeking.