LG G Watch R Score Details “With a bright circular screen, a strong battery, and genuinely useful voice controls, the G Watch R is the best Android Wear watch yet. Sadly, it’s probably too large and sporty for some.” Strong, water resistant, metal construction

Very comfortable to wear

Bright, fully circular P-OLED touchscreen

Excellent voice controls

Surprisingly long battery life Big for small wrists

Android Wear is still a work in progress

Limited offline use

The G Watch R is LG’s second attempt at making an Android Wear smartwatch, and this time it has decided style should come first. The circular screen separates it from the square competition; the case is metal; and the strap is made of leather. Modeled on traditional timepieces with a sporty edge, it’s more daring than the understated Moto 360, and a world apart from the geeky, rectangular devices that have so far defined the modern smartwatch revival.

Several years in development, the G Watch R is LG’s shot at making smart watches mainstream. Without style, they don’t stand a chance. But a cool design is only half the battle. LG can’t compromise on the tech or the techies will ignore it. Combining cutting edge tech with universal visual appeal is a tough ask. Can the LG G Watch R pull it off?

Video review

It doesn’t look like a smartwatch

It’s so low key that it’s hard to tell the G Watch R is an LG device. The only branding is found underneath the case, and on the reverse of the strap. None of the many watch faces have the LG logo on it. It’s a mature, considered decision, and a very welcome one.

It’s a world apart from the geeky, rectangular devices we’re used to using.

The matte black, stainless steel construction, combined with the diamond cut bezel, gives the watch a slick, classy style. It is large, but it never looks out of place when worn by a man. LG says it made the G Watch R to be a unisex device, but is it? The women I asked seemed to like the look, but considered it too large to wear, and after strapping the watch on, it was always larger than their wrist. It won’t put everyone off, but the G Watch R is definitely going to find its way onto more male wrists than female.

Android Wear woes and wins

The G Watch R runs Android Wear, and the day after it arrived, it received the 4.4W.2 software update. Sadly, it doesn’t have its own GPS chip, so it can’t figure out where it is without your phone, but it does have 4GB of internal storage memory, and now connects with Bluetooth headphones. Music stored locally inside Google Play Music can be synced across to the G Watch R, and played while the watch is offline. It worked well, and paired easily with our LG Gruve ‘phones, but there’s no way to fill the watch’s memory outside of using Play Music.

The G Watch R will track your steps and measure your heart rate. Used alongside the LG G3, neither agreed on the amount of steps I took, but remained within about 500 steps of each other. After a period of adjustment, the heart-rate monitor settled down, and presumably provided accurate results. On some occasions, it did say my heart was pumping at 107bpm, a highly unlikely figure given I’d been at my desk all morning. It interacted well with RunKeeper, and the accompanying app showed progress, time, and distance on the display.

What surprised me was Android Wear’s voice control system. Voice control has never been a feature I’ve felt inclined to use on phones very often, but it makes perfect sense for a wrist worn device. I found myself using it to set timers, check my steps, reply to messages, and activate Google Maps. The G Watch R’s microphone is sensibly mounted closest to your face, and it did a great job of picking up my voice, even in environments filled with ambient noise like the car, or Starbucks.

Android Wear is still a new operating system, and it’s a little feature light. It’s annoying not being able to reply to messages using Hangouts (it only recognizes SMS), and while it displays GPS navigation directions, it’s easy to misread them, and end up using your phone instead. On a more positive note, if you use Google Now’s contextual cards a lot, then you’ll find Android Wear fits very easily into your life.

Following the update to 4.4W2, the G Watch R did suffer from random disconnections with the LG G3, despite the Android Wear app insisting it was still linked up. Disconnecting, then reconnecting from inside the app solved the problem, but it did reappear. We’d expect this to be fixed in the future, and will be checking to see if the problem exists when the G Watch R is linked to a different Android phone.

A fast little round bugger

The G Watch R is powered by a 1.2GHz Snapdragon 400 processor with 512MB of RAM, and it never suffered from any performance issues. Given it won’t be used for playing many games, or editing video, this amount of power should be more than adequate.

The G Watch R is one of the most comfortable connected devices I’ve had on my wrist.

Touch sensitivity is excellent, and Android Wear’s innovative controls, which are standard across the platform, are quick to learn, and simple to use. Everything looks very sharp, thanks to the 320 x 320 pixel resolution, and the OLED screen displays realistic colors. However, it’s the deep blacks that really impress. Android Wear’s ambient mode, where the screen is mostly dark, looks stunning on the G Watch R, and it’s almost impossible to tell the screen apart from the physical, and equally black, bezel.

LG has water and dust proofed the G Watch R to IP67 standards, so it’ll survive a 30 minute dip in about a meter of water.

A bigger, better battery

A 410mAh battery has been crammed into the G Watch R, which is larger than both the Moto 360 and the Samsung Gear S. Standby time can make or break a smartwatch. How much can you expect out of LG’s watch? Using it normally and turning it off while sleeping at night, it managed between two-and-a-half to three days out of a single charge. Hard use, including navigation and repeated voice commands, plus a little music playback saw this drop down to two days.

The G Watch R doesn’t use wireless charging, but comes with a small plinth on which the watch sits, automatically lining up the charger contacts on the rear. It’s magnetic, so the watch is held in place, and grippy pads underneath ensure it stays on your desk.

Considering the high-res, color touchscreen, sizable processor, and relative small size of its battery; we were pleased with the G Watch R’s performance.

Conclusion

At the start of 2014, a technically capable smartwatch that looked like a real watch, that was powered by a strong battery and an easy to use, yet powerful operating system, seemed like a far off dream. The G Watch R is the first to truly tick all these boxes, while avoiding the software glitches and limited availability of the similar Moto 360.

It’s not perfect. Android Wear is still a work in progress, and its feature set is limited. The G Watch R needs to be connected to your phone if it’s to have any meaningful use – you can only see the time, set timers and alarms, plus track your steps when it’s offline – but the biggest issue is with the design.

The G Watch R looks brilliant, and if you’re male, it’ll look perfectly at home on your wrist. If you’re female, then it’s not so clear cut. Personal preference will play much more of a factor, and the choice of strap will be far more important. We know there are plenty of ladies out there who like large watches, but an out-of-the-box G Watch R may still be too masculine even for them.

If the styling doesn’t bother you, the G Watch R should be at the top of your list when out shopping for an Android Wear smartwatch.

Highs

Strong, water resistant, metal construction

Very comfortable to wear

Bright, fully circular P-OLED touchscreen

Excellent voice controls

Surprisingly long battery life

Lows

Big for small wrists

Android Wear is still a work in progress

Limited offline use

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