SMARTPHONES

In 2023, smartwatches tried to become fitness watches and vice versa

Sunday Runday

(Image credit: Android Central)

In his weekly column, our Senior Editor of Wearables and Fitness Michael Hicks discusses the world of smartwatches, apps, and fitness tech related to running and health, in his quest to get faster and more fit (and help you do the same).

As someone who reviews both smartwatches and specialized fitness watches, it’s nigh-impossible to find one that succeeds at performance, UI, health data, and fitness tracking all at once. Fitness wearables can’t compete for apps and phone connectivity, while smartwatches don’t offer proper training guidance and run out of battery far too quickly. 

My time as wearables editor in 2023 showed me one clear trend across all the major brands on both sides of the industry: smartwatches want to become fitness trackers, fitness watches want to become smartwatches, and they’re all rushing to be the first to reach the center… for better or worse.

Google brute-forced its way to the right balance this year by buying Fitbit and shoving all of its high-end sensors and fitness recommendations into the Pixel Watch 2. You get fast performance and all the apps that a fitness watch could never support, but also recommendations for how hard to work out that day based on your fitness level and fatigue.

Google Pixel Watch 2 hands-on

(Image credit: Nicholas Sutrich / Android Central)

The main issue is that you have to pay for Premium to get these insights, and the Fitbit brand has lost some of its luster in the past couple of years. That’s left the door wide open for competitors to shoot their shot.




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