Key features
Bigger, brighter wrist view
The 45mm version brings a screen that Google describes as 40% larger and twice brighter than before.
That matters because smartwatch usefulness often comes down to glanceability. A larger, brighter display makes stats, notifications and maps easier to read quickly, and it reduces the cramped feel that can make smaller watches frustrating for daily use.
Fitbit training tools with recovery context
This watch is built around more than heart-rate tracking alone. Custom running workouts, real-time guidance, advanced form tracking, readiness, cardio load and the Fitbit Morning Brief give it a more structured training angle.
For buyers, that means the watch has a clear use beyond counting steps. It fits best if you want your sleep, resting heart rate and recent effort to influence how hard you train, rather than treating fitness as a separate app you check occasionally.
Google ecosystem convenience
Offline Google Maps, Google Wallet, Assistant access, fast pairing with Pixel devices and control links to Pixel Buds, Pixel camera and Nest cameras make this watch strongest inside Google’s own world.
That convenience is the payoff for accepting daily charging. If your phone, payments and smart-home habits already run through Google, the watch can cut down small moments of friction throughout the day.
Battery routine, not battery freedom
Google quotes 24 hours with always-on display and up to 36 hours in battery saver mode, alongside charging that is 20% faster than Pixel Watch 2.
The practical implication is simple: this is a feature-rich smartwatch that rewards regular charging rather than a set-and-forget travel companion. If you are happy to drop it on the charger each day, the compromise is manageable. If not, the whole ownership experience feels tighter.