Google Pixel Watch Review: Surprisingly Convincing

EDITORS' RATING : 9 / 10
Pros
  • Bright, sharp, colorful display
  • Speedy charging
  • Touchscreen, button, and crown UI control
  • Intuitive software
  • Feels like a focused, finalized product
Cons
  • Battery life barely lasts a day
  • Requires phone to activate
  • The price is a bit steep
  • Subscription trials

After years of developing smart wearable software, acquiring Fitbit, and teaming up with Samsung, Google is ready to deliver its own smartwatch. The Google Pixel Watch is a 41mm round smartwatch with an AMOLED touchscreen display under a Gorilla Glass 5 dome. This device runs Wear OS 3.5 and requires a smartphone (an Android smartphone, to be specific) to activate, and it's pretty nice to look at, too.

If you've been wearing smart wearable devices over the past decade, you might expect that you'll know what you're getting from the Pixel Watch before you buy it. But this is no ordinary Android wearable. Instead, you'll find a finessed, focused product with hardware and software that truly feel like they were made for each other.

Much in the way Google has created a truly solid, reliable experience with its Pixel smartphone line, so too does it seem like Google's true vision for a smartwatch has arrived at last.

Industrial design

The Google Pixel Watch is a beautiful piece of hardware. The version we're reviewing here has what Google calls a Polished Silver case and a Charcoal Active band. The shape is elegant and the design looks and feels comfortable.

The display is bright, colorful, and responsive. In the past, I've found smartwatch software in general to be entirely too unintuitive. This device has a version of Google's wearable software that can be navigated easily in a variety of ways. I was surprised to find how quickly I became accustomed to switching between using the touchscreen, the crown, and the button.

The button on this device is well hidden but easy to access, as it should be. It's positioned just to the side of the crown and is capped with the same finish as the rest of the watch case. A single press brings up recently accessed apps, and a long press summons Google Assistant.

The crown works in concert with haptic feedback that goes a long way in making the hardware and software feel like a single entity. You'll feel tiny bumps as you roll through a list, and scroll to the top of a menu, you'll feel a more substantial bump.

The touchscreen may feel small to you if you've used an Apple Watch or any other more massive wearables from companies like Samsung. I assumed it would feel too small to me when I first heard the size of the screen, but since I first put the device on my wrist, I've not once wished for the same screen, only bigger.

Connectivity

If you get the 4G LTE version of this watch, you can potentially connect to a wireless network via eSIM. There is no physical SIM card slot on the Google Pixel Watch. The watch needs to be connected to the same carrier as its paired phone, but once it's activated, you don't need to be near your phone to connect to mobile data.

Connecting to the Pixel 7 with this Pixel Watch via Bluetooth 5.0 was extremely simple. Once I was connected to the phone, I was able to control the music playing in my car. My phone was connected to my car via Bluetooth, too, and though I still needed to get a playlist started from the phone's UI, I had basic controls on the watch from that point forward.

Google includes YouTube Music with the device and attempts to get you to join by offering a trial subscription for free. But, as with Spotify, you'll find an array of apps that have basic compatibility with remote control, too. I was also able to have some basic control of podcasts with Pocket Casts — though there we see the limits of an app that hasn't yet developed a full control UI, as I only really had the power to play and pause.

The Google Pixel Watch has its own GPS system built in, so you can navigate with Google Maps at your leisure. There you'll find another use case where the watch doesn't really replace your need for a smartphone, but it makes access slightly less distracting.

Fitness pro or fitness casual

Google acquired Fitbit and continued to run Fitbit as a separate sort of entity — you can still buy Fitbit devices with the Fitbit brand. Now, with the Pixel Watch, we have a Google-branded wearable that aims to deliver the level of fitness tracking previously only found in Fitbit-branded devices.

If you're looking to get in on tracking your fitness in a very serious way and do not mind paying a subscription fee, this device and its access to the Fitbit universe are a fantastic choice for you. If you've used the most high-end Fitbit devices in the past and are already all-in on Fitbit, you might want to think twice before buying a Google Pixel Watch.

The Pixel Watch does not include "auto start, stop, and pause of exercises" included with a device like the Fitbit Sense 2. Fitbit Sense 2 also includes a few other features that aren't included with the Pixel Watch: Amazon Alexa, Fitbit Pay, swim stroke tracking, high and low heart rate notifications, irregular heart rhythm notifications, all-day body response tracking, and a few more.

If you want to track the number of steps you take and see your heart pressure and heart rate at any given time without a subscription fee on the Pixel Watch, you can do that too. If you're a real "just the basics" sort of person when it comes to fitness, the Pixel Watch is on-point.

This is an Android

You will need an Android smartphone to activate the Pixel Watch, though that Android device doesn't have to be a Pixel phone. Google might disagree, but though the only basic requirement for an Android phone is to activate this device, the functionality strongly suggests that you have a phone on-hand most of the time. Activation requires a phone with Android 8 or newer. That's Oreo, so if you've purchased an Android phone in the last several years, you're almost certainly upgraded beyond the minimum.

This device does not activate or offer any significant functionality with any iOS device. That may change in the future, but for now, the Google Pixel Watch is made to work with Android phones only. That shouldn't be a shock, but for all iPhone users: turn back now.

It's also important to note that you're working with a watch that has its own proprietary watch straps. You can remove and replace each strap with a simple push of a button. Under the straps you'll find two rather curious elements: a set of pogo pins and a hole. 

While it's no big secret what we're seeing here, these elements aren't (yet) included in any official diagrams of the watch. According to Fitbit and Google, the pogo pins are "used for software development," and the hole on the opposite side is the smartwatch's barometric vent.

Apps and subscriptions

You'll be given 6 months of Fitbit Premium when you purchase this watch. You do not need to activate this subscription to use the watch. You will need to have a Fitbit account to access some functionality, but you do not need to pay a fee unless you'd like the full Fitbit Premium experience. Just as well, you can still access data from this watch's sensors without paying a subscription fee.

This device comes with 3 months of YouTube Music Premium. You can just as easily use a different music service, so long as it has some form of Wear OS companion app available, but YouTube Music is what Google recommends you use. You'll have the most extensive control options and you'll more than likely see the most updates to software if you're using Google's recommended apps with this device.

Google's Wear OS platform is better established than it's ever been before, but it remains limited when it comes to variety in available apps. Search Google Play for "music" for your Google Pixel Watch and you'll find Shazam, iHeart, SoundCloud, Spotify, Calm, and a few others — a total of fewer than 30 apps. Search "podcast" and you'll find around 23 with a lot of overlap with your search for music.

The good news is that when it comes to media playback with apps like Pocket Casts, you'll have automatic basic control, regardless of if the developers of that app have put the effort into developing a proper Wear OS app.

Battery life and charging

Google claims that the Pixel Watch will last up to 24 hours on a full charge. I've found that to be true — this watch never lasted more than a full day on a single charge. I've found myself forgetting to charge it, only to realize too late that it's turned itself off due to lack of battery power.

It's not that the device didn't notify me in time that I was going to run out of battery — I'm sure that, with time, I'd grow used to charging this device every night, as I do with my smartphone. It's just that because the watch felt like such an extension of my arm, the idea that I needed to take it off for a recharge didn't come nearly as naturally as charging a phone.

The speed at which this device charges is right on-point with what Google's claimed. The 294 mAh battery in this device is charged with an included USB-C magnetic charging cable at a fast clip. It takes approximately 25-35 minutes to charge from zero to 50%, and it'll be charged all the way in a little under an hour and a half. Above you'll see the Google Pixel Watch on its magnetic charging cable (the wireless charging puck part) using the Google Pixel 7 as a power source — it works! 

Google Pixel Watch verdict

Google has worked with many manufacturers to create Wear OS (formerly Android Wear) devices over the past decade or so. Despite having experience with the vast majority of devices that were released with this software, the Google Pixel Watch is the first that I've considered using beyond our standard review period.

This is the first Android smartwatch I've used that feels like more than just a toy. Early smartwatches and wearables always felt like something of a burden to me. I'd ask myself why I would want yet another device telling me I had a new email or tracking my steps when my smartphone already did the same thing.

Now I'm convinced that there's more to the equation. Google finally has a wearable product that's not just putting a phone on my wrist. At long last Google has delivered a wearable smart device that the average person will find worth wearing.

The Pixel Watch is available from Google for approximately $350 — for the Bluetooth/Wi-Fi version — while the 4G LTE + Bluetooth/Wi-Fi model has a price of approximately $400. The version we've reviewed here is the Polished Silver case with Charcoal Active band model.