I have two B&L Customs, a compact 7x25 and a conventional 7x35
Also an Olympus 8 x 40 conventional. I'm guessing at the objective sizes, but these are approximate. All are wide field, with large oculars and a lot of eye relief.
The eye relief is especially important if you wear glasses.
It is always a good idea to test them. One important test is to look at something in the distance and then put the binoculars up and see how fast you can find the object. Also take them back down and see how fast you can find the object again. If they are good, it should be pretty seamless, both ways with no eye strain and no refocusing of your eyes. With good binoculars you can look through them for a long time and not feel any eye strain. When you test them, be sure you have corrected the adjustable eyepiece to match the focus in the other eyepiece. If your eyes are normal, it should be very near the "0" diopter setting. If it is very far off, it probably indicates poor quality assembly
Lots of poor binoculars have poor collimation between the two sides, so you have to strain to put the images together. It is hard to find good binoculars for less than $150 to $200 Some where after that the law of diminishing return takes over and the quality improvements are less significant.
Any thing over 7 or 8 power will probably require a tripod or image stabilization to use effectively. I haven't used stabilized binoculars. It works well on digital cameras but it is more complicated to do with optics than a CCD.
Incidentally, the coating is to reduce reflections, both internal and external. It improves clarity and brightness, and should have no impact on seeing true colors. All quality optics have coated lenses, although sometimes it is not obvious.