
This is a budget‑level fitness tracker / smartwatch that markets itself as an “all‑in‑one” activity tracker: it monitors steps, calories burned, activity, possibly heart rate or other basic health metrics, supports a color display, and claims some water resistance (often IP68 or “waterproof”). It’s aimed at users who want a simple, inexpensive wearable to track everyday activity (walking, basic workouts), track sleep, and monitor basic fitness metrics — without the cost and complexity of a high‑end smartwatch.
This is a budget‑level fitness tracker / smartwatch that markets itself as an “all‑in‑one” activity tracker: it monitors steps, calories burned, activity, possibly heart rate or other basic health metrics, supports a color display, and claims some water resistance (often IP68 or “waterproof”). It’s aimed at users who want a simple, inexpensive wearable to track everyday activity (walking, basic workouts), track sleep, and monitor basic fitness metrics — without the cost and complexity of a high‑end smartwatch.
Core Metrics Coverage — Does it at least track basic metrics reliably: steps, calories, sleep, maybe heart‑rate or SpO₂?
Water Resistance / Durability — If you plan to wear it daily (hand washing, rain, sweat), waterproofing or water resistance is useful so the tracker doesn’t degrade quickly.
Battery Life & Charging Convenience — Basic trackers often trade off features for longer battery life; knowing how long it lasts per charge helps set expectations.
Accuracy & Reliability of Tracking — Simpler hardware and sensors may mean less accurate tracking (steps, calories, sleep quality). For wellness tracking (not medical), accuracy is “good enough.”
Comfort, Usability & Compatibility — Whether the watch is comfortable for daily wear; display size/readability; whether it works with common Android/iOS phones; whether setup is simple.
Value for Money / Intended Use vs Expectations — Given its low cost, does it meet realistic expectations (basic fitness & activity tracking) — and do you accept limitations (no advanced sensors, limited/approximate data)?
For many users, the main point of such a tracker is to monitor steps, calories burned, activity level, and sleep — enough to give a general sense of daily movement and patterns. Simpler trackers like this excel if those basics work. Often, these devices use accelerometer-based step counting and algorithms to estimate calories or sleep cycles.
These factors represent the most critical aspects that will impact your satisfaction with this product.
Work wonderfully as it should even tells you the days your next monthly cycle will be and ovulation period. Has alot of useful mini apps for the price you cant go wrong. The steps get counted seamlessly. Was easy to set up too I was surprised wasn't expecting much a good buy if you need to count ur steps.
This fitness tracker works for me. I gave up on the fitbit tracker because I could not migrate date. This tracker records steps accurately, has blood pressure monitoring which close to my BP monitor, lower but close enough. BAttery life lasts about a week. Bought another similar tracker for my better half.