Smart Watch for Men & Women with Call Answering, 1.85" Display, Fitness & Health Tracking (IP68)
Product description
If you want a smartwatch that does more than just count steps, this call-capable fitness watch is built around everyday health tracking and fitness modes, with the added convenience of answering or making calls from your wrist. On paper it ticks a lot of boxes: Bluetooth calling, sleep and heart monitoring, activity tracking, and a claimed IP68 water resistance rating. The trick is deciding whether those features match how you actually plan to use a watch.
Key takeaways
Bluetooth calling is the headline feature here. With a built-in microphone and speaker, you can handle calls directly on the watch, while still receiving vibration alerts for SMS text and social messages (including Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp, LinkedIn, Messenger, and more) when it’s synced to your phone.
For fitness and health, the watch uses a wrist-based PPG sensor for heart-rate monitoring 24 hours a day, plus it can save resting heart-rate data for 7 days (viewed in the “H Band” app). Blood oxygen and blood pressure are described as measured using reflective light sensors, and the watch also tracks steps, active minutes, distance, and calorie consumption.

For workouts, it supports 140+ fitness modes including running, cycling, HIIT, yoga and even swimming (among others), which is helpful if you prefer switching activities instead of relying on a single “general workout” setting.
What it’s like in everyday use
Imagine you’re commuting and your phone buzzes—on this watch, you’ll get a vibration alert and the call comes through via the built-in speaker. In practice, this kind of watch tends to be most useful for quick answers and short calls, especially when you’d rather not pull your mobile out every time. It’s also handy for notifications where you just want a heads-up.
For health tracking, it’s positioned as an “all-day” companion: heart rate runs continuously, sleep monitoring is included, and you can check trend-like information in the “H Band” app. That kind of routine data can be motivating, but keep expectations realistic: wrist-based readings are best used for monitoring patterns over time rather than treating them like a clinical device.



A limit to bear in mind: blood oxygen and blood pressure are measured via a reflective-light based sensor on the wrist, so if you’re very sensitive to measurement accuracy, you may find a dedicated medical-grade option more reassuring.
Where it shines (and where it doesn’t)
This watch feels well-suited to people who want one device for day-to-day activity and basic health awareness, plus the convenience of wrist-based calling and message alerts. The IP68 rating makes it easier to live with if your routine includes washing hands frequently, showering, or occasional swimming.
On the “fitness variety” front, 140+ workout modes are a big number, and the inclusion of options like swimming and HIIT suggests it’s meant for more than gentle walking. If you’re the sort of person who cycles through different training types, that breadth is genuinely useful.

However, it may not be the best choice if your priority is getting extremely precise health measurements or long-term reporting depth beyond what the app provides. Also, the water-resistance guidance includes a clear limitation: don’t wear it in hot water (including hot showers). If you regularly wear watches while in heated environments, that’s a practical downside.
Key specifications
- Display: 1.85"
- Bluetooth calling: Built-in microphone and Hi-Fi speaker
- Health monitoring: Heart rate (PPG sensor, 24 hours), sleep monitoring
- Resting heart-rate history: Saves data for 7 days
- Blood measurement: Blood oxygen and blood pressure measured via reflective-light based sensor
- Fitness modes: 140+ workout modes (examples mentioned include yoga, swimming, HIIT, running, skipping, cycling)
- Activity tracking: Steps, active minutes, distance, calorie consumption
- Water resistance: IP68
- Battery: 250 mAh, claimed 7 days normal usage / 30 days standby, fully charge in 2 hours
- Compatibility: iOS 10.0/Android 5.0 or above, Bluetooth 5.3 or above
- App: Connected via “H Band”
Care & limitations that matter



IP68 is reassuring for everyday wet situations, but the manufacturer guidance matters: don’t use it in hot water, including hot showers. If your routine involves hot tubs or frequent steam environments, this watch may not be built for that.
Also, compatibility depends on the phone meeting the stated iOS/Android and Bluetooth version requirements. If you’re using an older phone or Bluetooth version, you may want to double-check before committing.
Is it worth it?
Worth considering if you want a smartwatch that covers the basics properly—heart-rate and sleep monitoring, step and workout tracking, plus notification vibration and Bluetooth calling for times when you’d rather not reach for your phone. The 140+ fitness modes and IP68 rating point to a wearable aimed at active, everyday use rather than just casual tracking.

You may want to skip it if you’re mainly after a premium-feeling smart interface or if you care most about medical-level measurement accuracy, because the blood oxygen and blood pressure readings are described as wrist-based reflective-light measurements. It might not suit you if you regularly expose the watch to hot water environments.
Buying it makes most sense when you’ll actually use the call/notification features and the workout tracking variety, and when your phone meets the compatibility requirements.
Mini FAQ
Does it support making and answering calls from the watch?



Yes—Bluetooth calling with a built-in microphone and Hi-Fi speaker is included, so you can answer or make calls directly from the watch.
What does it track for health?
It’s described as tracking heart rate 24 hours a day and sleep monitoring, with resting heart-rate data saved for 7 days. It also measures blood oxygen and blood pressure via reflective-light based sensors on the wrist.
How waterproof is it?
It’s rated IP68 for water resistance, and the guidance includes examples like washing hands, showering and swimming. However, it says not to wear it in hot water.
Which app is used?
The watch connects to the phone via the “H Band” app.
Is it compatible with iPhones and Android phones?
Compatibility is stated for iOS 10.0/Android 5.0 or above, and Bluetooth 5.3 or above.
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