Description
This smartwatch tracks steps, heart rate, and sleep, perfect for fitness newbies or anyone wanting a budget-friendly health companion.
The 1.85-inch touchscreen pairs with your phone for calls and notifications, and its 200+ watch faces let you switch up the look daily.
Battery life stretches up to 5 days of regular use, but reviewers note the charger is proprietary—so don't misplace it.
Heads up—a few customers received watches that were previously synced, so check for leftover data right away.
Buy Suggestion
[Verdict]
Skip this fitness tracker unless your expectations are rock-bottom. At $19.99, the strongest reason to consider it is the low entry price for basic step and heart-rate tracking. This is for someone who wants a disposable health companion and is willing to accept potential battery death or pre-owned units as part of the bargain.
[What buyers say]
Customer feedback reveals a split experience. Several buyers report the watch "still working well" months later, praising battery life and sturdy feel for the price. However, multiple reviews describe receiving units that were "previously synced" with leftover data from strangers, and one buyer’s watch died after a month—the charger "didn't acknowledge that it was hooked up." A recurring complaint is the proprietary charger; if lost, charging is impossible. One user noted the phone notification feature stopped working while other functions remained intact.
[Honest drawback]
The most concrete failure pattern is the non-replaceable, proprietary charger combined with sudden battery death. One reviewer's watch simply stopped charging after a month, and the device is bricked without that specific cable. Additionally, multiple buyers received watches already synced to someone else's data—suggesting poor quality control or used returns being repackaged.
[Price take]
At 97% off the listed $749.99, this is not a real discount—you are buying a $20 smartwatch with $20 performance, not a luxury tracker at clearance pricing.
Skip this fitness tracker unless your expectations are rock-bottom. At $19.99, the strongest reason to consider it is the low entry price for basic step and heart-rate tracking. This is for someone who wants a disposable health companion and is willing to accept potential battery death or pre-owned units as part of the bargain.
[What buyers say]
Customer feedback reveals a split experience. Several buyers report the watch "still working well" months later, praising battery life and sturdy feel for the price. However, multiple reviews describe receiving units that were "previously synced" with leftover data from strangers, and one buyer’s watch died after a month—the charger "didn't acknowledge that it was hooked up." A recurring complaint is the proprietary charger; if lost, charging is impossible. One user noted the phone notification feature stopped working while other functions remained intact.
[Honest drawback]
The most concrete failure pattern is the non-replaceable, proprietary charger combined with sudden battery death. One reviewer's watch simply stopped charging after a month, and the device is bricked without that specific cable. Additionally, multiple buyers received watches already synced to someone else's data—suggesting poor quality control or used returns being repackaged.
[Price take]
At 97% off the listed $749.99, this is not a real discount—you are buying a $20 smartwatch with $20 performance, not a luxury tracker at clearance pricing.