Mobovi Ticwatch Pro 3 GPS Review

Mobovi Ticwatch Pro 3 GPS Review
(4.1)
Mobovi Ticwatch Pro 3 GPS Review
Overall
4.1
  • Battery
    (5)
  • Build Quality
    (4)
  • Features
    (4)
  • Fitness/Health
    (3.5)
  • Software
    (4)

Summary

One of the only two WearOS smartwatches equipped with the Snapdragon Wear OS 4100, it shines a whole new (favorable) light on the platform; making Mobovi a company to keep an eye on in the wearable space.

Pros

  • Innovative Dual Display 
  • Great battery life 
  • Latest Snapdragon Wear 4100 processor

Cons

Proprietary Charging connector has a weak magnet, wireless charging would have been better

The Ticwatch Pro 3 isn’t the watch that I’d imagine would end up at the top of my favorite smartwatch list, but it has. The unassuming, seemingly average FTSN-screened wristwatch brings a twist – not only to WearOS devices – but the smartwatch landscape as a whole.

Out the Box

The Ticwatch Pro box and packaging is rather standard, packed with the essentials and nothing more: the watch, a proprietary magnetic charging clip, a power brick, the user guide, and a few marketing materials upselling Mobvoi’s products. The box itself does a great job selling you on the specs of the device.

On the Wrist

The 454×454 AMOLED display is immersed in a watch case that measures out to 47 x 48 x 12.2 mm, which gives the Ticwatch Pro 3 a masculine build and one more suitable for big wrists. The AMOLED display is covered by a low-powered, secondary FSTN screen that’s always on. The Dual display, assisted by the Snapdragon Wear 4100, gets around three days consistently, while putting the device in Essential Mode gives you up to 45 days with the FSTN screen only.

The watch itself has a stainless steel chassis, with the back side (that’s pressed up against your skin when wearing) made of polycarbonate (plastic). In daily usage, the back makes it more comfortable, complemented by the Silicon band. Orange stitching outlines the watchband, giving the device a more premium look without sacrificing comfort.

WearOS Shines on the Ticwatch

After using the Ticwatch Pro for a few weeks , it becomes obvious that under-powered devices with outdated processors were the culprit behind the rad rep the WearOS has. The once clunky, slow UI is now snappy, responsive and glitch-free. Granted, the Mobvoi Launcher has navigation sensibilities that the ‘curved tab’ style grid of the stock UI – which you would turn back in in settings if that’s yours thing.

WearOS in rare form: Ticwatch Pro 3

Display1.4” Retina AMOLED 454 x 454 + FSTN display + Low-Power backlit LCD Always-on display
ProcessorSnapdragon Wear 4100
WirelessWi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.0
NFCGoogle Pay-enabled
SensorsGyroscope, Accelerator, Barometer, Heart-Rate Sensor
AudioLoudspeaker, Microphone
NavigationGPS+Beidou+Glonass+Galileo+QZSS
WaterproofIP68 and pool swimming suitable
Storage8GB ROM, 1GB RAM Memory

Health and Fitness features

Mobvoi has a fitness suite of apps that are as extensive as any. Granted, they’re one-task ponies, features are broken down by app opposed to the suite like approach of Apple and Samsung Health. TicHealth is the central hub for checking on your profile stats, and brings all the data from TicPulse (heart rate), TicSleep, TicOxygen (blood oxygen,TicBreathe, TicHearing and TicExcercise all into one central location. Google Fit is present, rounding out the fitness and workout abilites.

1000+ Watch Faces

The beauty of the AMOLED display is really brought to life by the variety of Watch Faces Mobvoi has on offer, and the it really adds personality to the Ticwatch Pro 3.

Conclusion

What Mobovi has engineered is nothing short of commendable, to say the least. The Ticwatch Pro 3 has single-handedly broken the cycle of WearOS devices being bested by the Apple Watch and Galaxy Watch due to ecosystem cohesiveness and smooth response time. Mobvoi has also given is flagship wearable unique features and a quality build that competes with the big dogs, at a price that manages to undercut them.

For anyone looking for a full-featured smartwatch that improves the expectations set by prior WearOS devices, the TicWatch Pro 3 is currently the undisputed king.

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