The number of smartwatches on the market is higher than ever before, but how many of those smartwatches are actually worth buying is a very different question.
With the earliest incarnations, you got weird features like a spy camera on the wrist strap and chunky exposed screws, all atop a bespoke and not-all-that-good operating system.

Do we really need a camera on our wrists? It seems not.
Then came the Apple Watch, which quickly became the most popular smartwatch on the market – no doubt helped along by the wide variety of different finishes and straps on offer. But then Apple’s a totally different platform, ultimately, if that’s the ecosystem you splash around in, you’d probably be better off with an Apple Watch.

Credit: Owen Williams

First impressions
Over the last couple of years, I’ve been lucky enough to test a few different watches, including the Original Gear, Moto 360, the Tizen-based Gear S2 Classic and a few others. The Huawei Watch actually arrived at about the same time as the Gear S2 Classic, and as such has had to vie for wrist-time. The Huawei model I looked at was also the ‘Classic’ but there’s an ‘Active’ and ‘Elite’ edition too.

“The Huawei Watch is the smart timepiece choice for anyone living in the modern world,” is another of the company’s lines. You’re not just getting any old smartwatch, people, you’re making a definitive choice about a contemporary timepiece.
There’s a whole range of different straps (leather, stainless steel link strap or stainless steel mesh strap) and a “multitude” of color options to keep things interesting.

The metal watch unit itself is a polished cold-forged stainless steel affair that measures 42mm in diameter and 11.3mm in depth.
What’s your problem?
The Watch comes with a few different customizable options, but all use the same slightly-too-thick 11.3mm deep watch unit.The result of this is that it’s a bit too chunky for many people to wear – I wouldn’t in the long term, and certainly think that many women would also be put off by the heft.

It might seem like a strange complaint, but I also found the leather-strapped version to be disconcertingly light. I like a premium, expensive product to convey that sense of quality through its design, and while Huawei’s has a go at this, it isn’t altogether successful. Admittedly, a more expensive version with a metal mesh or strap band would add to the weight and fix that a little, but then you’d have to spend even more money.
It’s ‘nouveau riche’ when what it wants to be is ‘old money,’ and as a result it fails to deliver that feeling of class.
Comparing it with something like the Samsung Gear S2 Classic only highlights this further for me – the Samsung brought back classic watch design but added truly useful functionality by allowing you to control it with the rotating bezel.

The S2 Classic’s rotating bezel


➤ Huawei Watch