Optus Mobile Review ALDI Mobile Review Amaysim Mobile Review Belong Mobile Review Circles.Life Review Vodafone Mobile Review Woolworths Mobile Review Felix Mobile Review Best iPhone Plans Best Family Mobile Plans Best Budget Smartphones Best Prepaid Plans Best SIM-Only Plans Best Plans For Kids And Teens Best Cheap Mobile Plans Telstra vs Optus Mobile Optus NBN Review Belong NBN Review Vodafone NBN Review Superloop NBN Review Aussie BB NBN Review iiNet NBN Review MyRepublic NBN Review TPG NBN Review Best NBN Satellite Plans Best NBN Alternatives Best NBN Providers Best Home Wireless Plans What is a Good NBN Speed? Test NBN Speed How to speed up your internet Optus vs Telstra Broadband ExpressVPN Review CyberGhost VPN Review NordVPN Review PureVPN Review Norton Secure VPN Review IPVanish VPN Review Windscribe VPN Review Hotspot Shield VPN Review Best cheap VPN services Best VPN for streaming Best VPNs for gaming What is a VPN? VPNs for ad-blocking When it comes to Android-friendly wearables, the premium end of the market has been dominated by glitzy gear like the Samsung Galaxy Watch while the mid-tier has typically been the stomping ground for more health-centric brands like Garmin and Fitbit. Across both of these segments, a circular screen is the rule rather than exception. In contrast, the Ticwatch GTH Pro is pitching itself as the natural choice of those who want the broader benefits of a smartwatch, but don’t necessarily want to pay extra for premium materials and design. Essentially, it’s an alternative for people who don’t really want to buy an Apple Watch, but still kinda want an Apple Watch. The table below shows how local pricing for the Moboi Ticwatch GTH Pro varies. To the naked eye, most of the similarities are obvious. Just like the Apple’s flagship wearable, the Ticwatch GTH Pro is built around a squared-off 1.55-inch display. As with Apple’s wearable, it’s also water resistance to 5ATM - which means you can safety take it out for a swim, just not to the beach.  When it comes to the differences, a closer look yields ample results. If you’ve spent any time with any of the various Apple Watches out there, you’ll pretty quickly pick up on the chunky and uneven bezels here, plus the difference in material quality and design here. I wouldn’t say that the Ticwatch GTH Pro feels as cheap as something like the Amazfit GTS, but it definitely comes across as cheaper in feel-factor than Apple’s flagship wearable. The difference between the dimmer LCD screen here and the OLED one on the Apple Watch is also particularly pronounced.  Still, if you’re spending this much on a smartwatch, those design-centric drawbacks aren’t necessarily going to be dealbreakers. The Ticwatch GTH Pro gets most of the way there when it comes to looking like an Apple Watch, even if it fumbles things when it comes to feeling like one. And to be fair,  dispensability has its upsides. Where I sometimes worried about taking nicer wearables to rock climbing due to the coarseness of the surfaces involved, the fact that the Ticwatch GTH Pro doesn’t have that premium price-tag or luxury tech feel meant that I wasn’t that worried about unexpected and everyday wear-and-tear that sometimes came with wearing it.  Mobvoi’s mimicry even extends to the details like the Apple Watch’s digital crown, with Ticwatch GTH Pro boasting a dial of its own mounted on the right-most edge. This interface is a lightly more nub-like that its design, but it comes complemented by a secondary fingerprint sensor that’s used for more precise arterial health tracking. As for the rest of the health-tracking hardware involved, the Ticwatch GTH Pro boasts 24-hour heart tracking, SpO2 sleep tracking, an accelerator, a skin temperature sensor and fourteen dedicated workout modes. This includes the following:

Outdoor run Outdoor cycling Rope skipping Swimming Walking Free style Mountain climbing Indoor running Gymnastics Soccer Basketball Indoor cycling Yoga

Not only does the companion app for the Ticwatch GTH Pro provide you with plenty of health and fitness insights, but it does so without pushing you towards any sort of premium subscription service. There are no caveats, special exceptions or hidden terms and conditions aside from having to attach your data to a Mobvoi account. Once you’ve done that, the Mobvoi app gives you solid at-a-glance insights based on the heart rate, activity and sleep tracking data that the Ticwatch GTH Pro ambiently attracts. What’s more, most of this data is only ever a swipe away on the smartwatch’s interface if you don’t feel like opening the app on your phone. While it doesn’t support third party applications of digital payments via NFC, the Ticwatch GTH Pro does support remote music control and notification previews for a connected Android smartphone, plus the setting of timers, a stopwatch and dedicated weather app. It’s not a huge library of functionality, but all the basics you’d expect are here. The Mobvoi app also provides you with a ton of alternative watch faces. None of these is particularly standout, but the range itself is diverse enough that most people will probably be able to find something they like and customize it accordingly.  While I enjoyed my time with the Ticwatch GTH Pro for the most part, there were a few software-related issues that occasionally made themselves known. For instance, I could never quite get the weather widget on the smartwatch to display anything and the temperature sensor that prompts you to start recording your workout would often trigger at times when I wasn’t doing anything particularly strenuous and fail to trigger in situations where I might actually want it to. In practice, I often ended up getting around 7 or 8 days on a single charge. That’s still plenty of battery life, and enough that I rarely found that shortfall to be an issue. However, it still represented something of a broken promise by the manufacturer so it’s worth noting. The other caveat here is that recharging the Ticwatch GTH Pro via the proprietary magnetic USB charger is frustratingly finicky. It usually took me a few tries to get it right, since the magnets that hold the connectors in place are very easy to pull apart or otherwise become misaligned. If you’re looking for an affordable wearable that apes the aesthetics and functionality of the Apple Watch at a discount, the Ticwatch GTH Pro will you get most of the way there. It’s not as good as the real thing, but if you’re looking at buying this particular piece of tech, I suspect that maybe that isn’t what you’re after anyway. The Ticwatch GTH Pro looks to carve out a new niche for itself. It isn’t trying to have it all. Instead, Mobvoi are trying to focus on the things that their target audience actually care about at the expense of everything else. If that’s a trade-off you’re willing to make, you’ll probably be plenty happy with what the Ticwatch GTH Pro has to offer. Neverthless, the table below lays out some of the key differences between Mobvoi’s latest budget friendly smartwatch and the competition.

Mobvoi Ticwatch GTH Pro review  An Apple alternative with a worse screen and a better price - 90Mobvoi Ticwatch GTH Pro review  An Apple alternative with a worse screen and a better price - 83Mobvoi Ticwatch GTH Pro review  An Apple alternative with a worse screen and a better price - 41Mobvoi Ticwatch GTH Pro review  An Apple alternative with a worse screen and a better price - 12