After years spent in the rumor mills, the OnePlus Watch is finally here and on our hands. With the company slowly diverging into other markets, it was only a matter of time before we got a smartwatch from OnePlus. In fact, it’s slightly weird that we got a OnePlus TV before a OnePlus Watch.
But the OnePlus Watch almost didn’t exist. The original smartwatch project was canceled sometime in 2015-2016, with Carl Pei then revealing early design sketches of a watch that will never exist in a since-deleted tweet. But since then, the company seems to have changed its stance on wearables. Last year, we saw OnePlus launch its first fitness band and today we have the OnePlus Watch.
So what is the OnePlus Watch? For the most part, it is a fairly typical smart wearable. It isn’t running on the Wear OS platform by Google but rather OnePlus’ custom software. This does seem to give it one big advantage, namely an advertised 14 days of battery life. All of this for a starting price of $159.
But is it any good as a smartwatch or is it just a glorified fitness band? Let’s find out.
The OnePlus Watch has a classic, circular design. The casing is made out of polished stainless steel with classic lugs that hold fluoroelastomer straps.
The glass covering the display is of an unspecified scratch-resistant variety with curved edges. Underneath the glass, the bezel around the display has circular rings similar to those found on some other OnePlus accessories.
On the right side of the watch are two buttons, a function button at the top and a power button below. The function button has the OnePlus name embossed on it, which brings back suppressed memories of the Verizon logo on the Samsung Galaxy Note II home button. Fortunately, this one is too small to notice.
The back of the watch has a plastic cover for the casing and all the optical sensors. There are also two connectors for the magnetic pogo pin charger. On the left side (when facing the display) is the loudspeaker and on the bottom is the microphone.
The straps connect to the watch using standard spring-loaded bar pins, which should allow the user to swap them out with any other traditional watch bands. The buckle for the default strap uses a similar design to the Sport Band on the Apple Watch, except the one on the OnePlus Watch is a bit loose and pops out while you’re trying to put the watch on. You also get just one size in the box.
As you’d expect from a watch designed for fitness tracking, the OnePlus Watch is IP68 and 5ATM rated for water resistance.
At 46mm, the OnePlus Watch is pretty large. It certainly doesn’t look right on my small wrists and looks like I have the sundial wristwatch from The Flintstones. The one-size-fits-all band is also massive and loops almost twice around my wrists. OnePlus seems to think this is okay because obviously everyone has the same giant wrists.
OnePlus will also be selling a Limited Edition version of the OnePlus Watch. This version uses cobalt alloy for the casing rather than stainless steel and it comes with two bands, the standard fluoroelastomer strap and a leather strap with butterfly buckle. In India, the leather strap is switched with a vegan leather strap, likely to keep costs down. However, this version will be arriving at a later date at an unknown price.
Personally, I’m not a fan of the OnePlus Watch design. I’m a bit tired of the ‘digital smartwatch looking like a regular watch’ cliche and the OnePlus Watch design is about as cliched as it gets. You’ll have a hard time convincing me someone spent more than a day designing this.
What’s more disappointing is that the sketches from 2015 look far better than the final product. It was still round back then but the design had more flair and some interesting ideas. The final OnePlus Watch is about as generic as it gets and wouldn’t get a second glance, especially in this Midnight Black color that we received.
The OnePlus Watch has a 1.39-inch, 454×454 AMOLED touchscreen display. The large size of the watch has allowed the display to also be pretty sizable, which makes it quite easy to operate the touchscreen and fit more information on-screen at once.
In terms of image quality, the display is quite sharp thanks to the ample 326ppi pixel density. Small text and iconography do not look rough and jagged as it tends to on many other smartwatches. The use of an AMOLED panel means the primarily dark UI also has a perfectly black background at all times.
Interestingly enough, the OnePlus Watch is one of the few that doesn’t have a ridiculously oversaturated AMOLED panel as seen on many other watches. Most colors look vibrant but not aggressively so. The display doesn’t have a high bit depth, however, so there’s some noticeable banding on some watch faces with gradients. Or perhaps the issue lies with the watch faces.
The touch response is so-so. It’s not super responsive, which can occasionally feel a bit jarring if you’re coming from a smartphone but it works fine most of the time.
The display has five manual brightness levels and an auto mode. You can also quickly toggle between three manual modes and the auto mode from the drop-down control panel. The display gets bright enough under sunlight but the auto-brightness is very conservative. The display often appears too dark indoors and had me switching to manual brightness. However, this seems like a OnePlus thing as even their smartphones do the same thing.
The display has two major limitations. First, there’s no always-on mode, which means you have to raise your wrist every time you want to see the time. Second, you can’t tap the screen to turn it on. For some reason, the touchscreen gets disabled when the screen is off so the only way to wake the watch is to raise it on press one of the side buttons.
Now the raise to wake function mostly works fine but it’s not as good as some of the best smartwatches out there and oddly enough, also worse than the OnePlus Band, which woke up at the slightest tile of your wrist. In comparison, the OnePlus Watch requires a much more deliberate twist and raise to wake up, which isn’t always convenient. Even if the raise to wake was perfect, it still can’t beat the convenience of an always-on display.
The OnePlus Watch runs on a custom OS by OnePlus. This is likely a version of the OS used on the OnePlus Band, with a few extra features added on top.
You control the UI using the touchscreen and the function button. Pressing the function button once brings up the app launcher. Pressing it again takes you back to the homescreen from wherever you may be in the UI. You navigate by tapping on items and then swiping from the left edge to go back.
The app drawer is a list of all the functions that the watch is capable of, such as workouts, activity tracking, sleep tracking, heart rate monitor, stress monitor, blood oxygen sensor, alarms, timers, and so forth. The large display makes it quite easy to go through all the features without having to scroll too much, as was the case with the Band. The UI is reasonably responsive. It also scrolls at 60fps, which makes it relatively fluid.
From the homescreen, you can swipe down to bring the control center. Here you have shortcuts to enable DND, adjust brightness, find your phone, set alarms, use the screen as a flashlight (a pretty poor one to be honest but usable if you have literally no other source of light), and access the settings.
Similarly, you can swipe up from the homescreen to access your notification. These don’t seem to be synced at all with the phone, which means they persist even if were to access them on the phone and dismiss them there.
Pressing and holding presents the UI to change watch faces. This is a fairly standard UI that we have seen on pretty much every other smartwatch now. You get a sideways scrolling list of installed watch faces, you can tap on them to select them or hit the settings button below to customize them. Depending upon the watch face, you can adjust the design, color scheme, and/or complications.
As of this writing, the OnePlus Watch had 15 different watch face designs, of which 14 can be installed on the watch at any given time. If you want to add more, you will need to remove existing ones. The transfer of watch faces is significantly faster than it was on the OnePlus Band as they basically transfer instantly here.
Not being on a standardized platform such as Wear OS does mean there is no third-party app support on the OnePlus Watch, including that for watch faces. Any additional functionality will have to come from OnePlus as the company hasn’t announced any SDK for third-party developers to build upon. It’s likely that OnePlus will add more watch faces in the future through updates but I’m not expecting any additional features or app-specific functionality. Makes it a bit hard to justify the smartwatch moniker.
Still, the OnePlus Watch does come packed with a fair number of features. Apart from all the fitness-related features mentioned before, the OnePlus Watch has a built-in audio player. You transfer any audio files you have to the watch through the phone app, pair some Bluetooth headphones to the watch and then you’re good to go. If your playlist can fit within the 2GB of available space on the watch then you don’t need to take your phone with you out on a run if all you need it for is to listen to music.
The OnePlus Watch can also interface with any OnePlus TV models that you may own. You can control basic TV features through the watch and if the watch detects you fell asleep while watching, it will automatically turn the TV off after 30 minutes.
The OnePlus Watch includes phone call functionality. Although the watch doesn’t have any networking capability, it acts as a headset to the connected smartphone and you can make and receive calls through the watch. If you have headphones paired to the watch, you also don’t have to worry about everyone around you listening in on your call.
The OnePlus Watch also includes a barometer and a compass. It also includes NFC but as of this writing, there is no way to use it.
To connect to the watch, you need the same OnePlus Health app that was required for the OnePlus Band. Through the app, you can add or remove watch faces, pick apps to sync notifications, and change the watch settings. You can also download and install updates for the watch through the app. More importantly, the app acts as a hub for all the fitness data coming through the watch and helps you keep track of all of it.
The Health app is available on the Google Play Store. This lets you use the watch with basically any Android smartphone. However, there is no iOS app at the moment, so you cannot use the OnePlus Watch with your iPhone, something that’s possible with Wear OS and also Samsung smartwatches.
Overall, the OnePlus Watch UI is well-designed and easy to use. There’s also a decent number of features built into the watch. Unfortunately, there is no possibility to install any applications and any additional watch faces will have to come from OnePlus. The watch is also not compatible with iPhone.