Is it worth it?
The Mindrose H80 is aimed at the buyer who wants one wrist device to cover the basics of daily wellness, step tracking and phone alerts without stepping into premium smartwatch pricing. Its appeal is easy to understand: a slim 1.47-inch touch display, long claimed battery life, 115 sports modes and a broad set of health readings. The real trade-off is just as clear: it offers plenty of features for casual tracking, but it is not the right watch to treat as a dependable medical tool.
I’d place this as a simple fitness-first smartwatch for people who want notifications, sleep tracking, step counts and general habit support in one lightweight package. It suits Android and iPhone owners who want more than a basic band, but less complexity than an Apple Watch or Samsung Galaxy Watch. Skip it if blood pressure accuracy is the reason you are buying, or if you want serious built-in sports GPS rather than route mapping through your phone.