Automatic detection is useful but imperfect: one review liked auto swing recognition and another said automatic set and rep tracking still misses some actions.
Across reviews, auto-detection was quick and effective for common activities like walks, though one reviewer still framed the watch as better for basic fitness starts than deeper training.
Connect IQ and even a Google Maps arrival help, but reviewers still describe the broader app ecosystem as limited compared with Apple Watch and Wear OS rivals.
Wear OS gives the FE a strong app ecosystem, with reviewers highlighting broad access to popular Android wearable apps and a deeper app library than many cheaper rivals.
The nylon band is widely praised for comfort, though reviews also note tradeoffs like dampness after sweat or showering and a slightly cheap first impression.
The bundled band drew positive comments for its soft feel and visual detailing, though band comfort and finish were discussed more favorably than outright premium materials.
Battery life beats Apple-style daily charging, but it is clearly shorter than most Garmins and drops hard with the always-on display enabled.
Battery life is the watch’s clearest compromise. Most reviewers landed around a day to roughly a day and a half, with lighter use stretching farther but daily charging remaining common.
Reviews consistently note blood oxygen tracking is included as part of Garmin's health suite, though none deeply validate its precision.
Blood oxygen support is a genuine strength for the FE, with multiple reviews calling out SpO2 monitoring as part of a health feature set that feels unusually complete for the price.
Bluetooth calling is present and works as expected in the reviews that mention it, with no major pairing complaints around core phone use.
Screen brightness is a major strength, with reviewers repeatedly calling the display very bright and easy to read at a glance.
The display gets bright enough for outdoor use, helping the FE stay readable in strong light even if the screen itself is not class-leading.
Build impressions are strong, with reviewers calling the watch premium, solid, and impressively well put together for such a thin device.
Build impressions were solid overall, with reviewers describing a watch that looks and feels put together well enough for everyday use despite its budget positioning.
The two-button setup is one of the biggest compromises, with several reviewers missing Garmin's usual extra buttons or better tactile control.
The physical buttons add useful control shortcuts and navigation, though one reviewer noted occasional missed presses that keep them from feeling flawless.
Calling works, but it is not perfect: several reviews praise Bluetooth call support and speaker quality, while another found app-based calling limitations.
Call handling is a real smartwatch strength here: reviewers noted on-watch calling support with a microphone and speaker, plus easy answering and declining from the wrist.
One gym-focused review found calorie burn tracking more useful in practice than detailed strength logging.
Charging is held back by Garmin's proprietary cable, which reviewers call functional but less convenient than standard connectors.
Charging is straightforward thanks to the included magnetic cable, but the lack of a power brick makes the overall setup feel more basic than convenient.
Charging speed is a bright spot, with reviews noting quick top-ups and fast enough recovery for a few more days of use.
Charging speed is slow by current standards. Multiple reviews put a full charge around one and a half to two hours, which is noticeable on a watch meant for round-the-clock tracking.
Coaching and training guidance are a real selling point, with Garmin Coach, Training Readiness, Training Status, and related tools all called out positively.
Coaching features are useful rather than advanced, with heart-rate prompts, running coaching, sleep coaching, and guided pace or intensity feedback called out most often.
Comfort is a standout strength thanks to the thin, light case and easy all-day wear, even compared with bulkier Garmin models.
Comfort is mixed. Some reviewers found the FE easy to wear all day and through sleep, while others said the strap or case edges became noticeable over longer sessions.
The Garmin Connect setup experience is fast and straightforward in the review that specifically discussed the companion app.
The phone-side software feels fragmented. Reviewers repeatedly mentioned needing multiple Samsung apps, and one also ran into a frustrating setup and account-linking process.
Garmin Pay support gives the watch useful payment convenience, even if Garmin's wallet experience is still less slick than top smartwatch platforms.
Contactless payments are well covered through NFC and wallet support, though one reviewer disliked Samsung’s hardwired shortcut behavior compared with Google Wallet preferences.
Cross-platform support is workable but uneven: Android gets some extra perks, while one review specifically says the iOS experience is not as good.
Compatibility is limited: the FE is built for Android, does not work with iPhone, and some higher-value features are reserved for Samsung phones specifically.
Customization is solid, with reviewers highlighting adjustable watch faces, font sizing, button mapping, and gesture tweaks.
Customization is a plus, with support for different straps and configurable replies, widgets, or interface shortcuts helping the watch feel flexible day to day.
Display quality is one of the watch's clearest strengths, with repeated praise for the huge, sharp, vibrant AMOLED panel.
Display quality is decent but compromised. Reviewers liked the AMOLED panel and sharpness, yet several also called out the small screen area and chunky bezels.
Durability looks strong in the supplied reviews, including one account of swimming, hiking, gym use, and dust with no visible wear.
Durability is one of the FE’s better traits, with reviewers noting IP68 protection, strong water resistance, and scratch-focused glass protection that make it feel tougher than the price suggests.
ECG is one of the watch's clearest omissions in the supplied reviews, and multiple reviewers flag that absence as disappointing at this price.
ECG support helps the FE stand out on paper, but its usefulness is reduced by Samsung-phone requirements in some setups.
Fit is generally praised, with reviewers saying the X1 sits flat and avoids feeling cumbersome despite its large display.
The single 40mm case was described as fitting a broad range of wrists, even if that same one-size approach also limits buyer choice.
Fitness tracking accuracy is broadly strong, with reviewers describing the overall workout performance as reliable and in line with expected results.
General fitness tracking is consistently good for the basics. Reviewers found workout tracking dependable for heart rate, distance, and everyday exercise, even if the watch is not aimed at serious athletes.
GPS performance is repeatedly described as accurate and dependable, even without multiband support, though some reviewers still note that omission.
GPS accuracy is generally solid, with route tracking that stayed close to reality and avoided major path errors, though minor deviations still showed up at times.
Health tracking accuracy comes across as strong in the reviews that tested it more closely, especially around sleep reliability and chest-strap-like heart-rate agreement.
Health tracking is broadly strong for the class. Reviewers praised the range of metrics and said the core readings were useful, even if certain values can skew slightly or newer premium extras are absent.
Heart-rate accuracy is a major strength overall, though not flawless: most reviews are highly positive, but one treadmill-focused review saw delayed readings early in sessions.
Heart-rate tracking performs well overall. Several reviewers found readings close to reference devices, usually with only a slight high bias rather than major errors.
LTE or cellular support is absent, and multiple reviewers treat that as a meaningful smartwatch limitation.
Materials quality feels premium, with repeated mentions of titanium, sapphire, and stronger-than-expected construction for the thin case.
Material choices feel better than entry-level, with sapphire crystal glass and an aluminum case helping the watch avoid a cheap feel.
Menu navigation is workable overall but can feel fiddly in specific cases like hazard scrolling and edge taps.
Navigation is easy to learn, with quick tile scrolling and bezel-based movement helping users move around the watch efficiently.
Music controls are present, but the review evidence focuses more on availability than on any especially polished control scheme.
Onboard music is well supported, with 32GB storage and offline playback from services like Spotify highlighted across reviews.
Onboard music support is useful enough for workouts, with one reviewer noting that music can be downloaded directly to the watch for offline listening.
The operating system is improved and more intuitive than older Garmin software for some reviewers, but it still trails Apple in polish.
The operating system experience is capable but dated. Reviewers liked Wear OS access and familiar Galaxy watch behavior, yet several also noted that the FE is not on Samsung’s freshest software stack.
Outdoor visibility is excellent, with reviewers specifically calling out bright-sun readability and easy on-course viewing.
Outdoor visibility is strong thanks to a bright display and clear text, making the FE easier to read outside than its chunky bezels might suggest.
Pairing reliability looks excellent in the supplied coverage, including instant rangefinder pairing in one hands-on golf review.
Pairing can be a pain outside the Samsung comfort zone. One review described account linking and setup as fussier than it should be.
Recovery insights are genuinely useful, with reviewers pointing to sleep need guidance, recovery metrics, and training decisions influenced by the watch's feedback.
Recovery-style insights are present through sleep and running analysis, with reviewers calling out physical and mental recovery data plus deeper running-form metrics.
Reliability is not spotless in the supplied reviews, with one reviewer reporting resets and crashes during a round before things settled down.
One reviewer explicitly framed the FE as a tried-and-true entry point, suggesting dependable day-to-day behavior even if the overall package is not especially exciting.
Safety features are a quiet strength, especially the LED torch and red mode for visibility, signaling, or nighttime navigation.
Safety coverage includes emergency access and heart-related alerts, giving the FE more protective utility than a bare-bones budget smartwatch.
Size choice is limited, and at least one review flags the one-size-only approach as a drawback.
Size choice is a weakness. Reviewers repeatedly pointed out that the FE comes in only one 40mm size, which narrows its appeal for shoppers wanting a larger watch.
Sleep tracking is reviewed positively, with one reviewer calling it excellent and another saying its sleep data was largely reliable.
Sleep tracking is one of the FE’s more convincing health features. Reviews found its sleep timing and stage data generally accurate, though total sleep can read a bit low.
Notifications are easy enough to view, but the overall experience is basic rather than smartwatch-leading.
Phone notifications are a strong everyday feature, with reviewers saying alerts reach the wrist promptly and feel easy to manage from the watch.
Smartwatch features are useful rather than class-leading, with calls, music, payments, and voice notes covered but not enough to fully replace a phone.
The FE feels surprisingly complete for a budget smartwatch, delivering a broad mix of health, fitness, and smart features that covers most mainstream needs.
Software smoothness is decent but not perfect: some reviewers describe the watch as fast and smooth, while another noticed frame-rate lag.
Software smoothness is adequate at best. Some reviewers found the interface responsive enough in daily use, but sluggish app loads, hiccups, and an aging chip came up often.
Step tracking gets only limited direct scrutiny, but one review says the watch does a solid job for basic step-and-sleep tracking.
One hands-on review found step counting close to spot-on in simple manual checks, suggesting good enough accuracy for everyday activity tracking.
Stress tracking remains one of Garmin's core daily health tools and is still described as useful in the supplied review coverage.
Stress tracking is present as part of the FE’s broader wellness toolkit, though reviewers spent more time noting availability than validating its precision.
The design is divisive but mostly positive: reviewers like the slim, modern look, though not everyone loves the square, Apple-adjacent aesthetic.
Design is broadly appealing. Reviewers liked the classic round shape and felt the watch looked good, even if the thick bezel makes it feel less modern.
Third-party app support is one of the weaker areas, with reviewers repeatedly saying Garmin still trails Apple and Wear OS here.
Third-party app support is a standout advantage, with reviewers repeatedly highlighting access to mainstream apps through Google Play.
Touch response is generally good, but sweaty fingers, wet use, and edge interactions still create friction in several reviews.
Touch input is easy enough to use, with taps and swipes generally feeling responsive and not overly finicky on the small display.
The user interface still feels dated to some reviewers, even if the watch is usable day to day and improved in places.
The user interface is easy to understand, using familiar tiles, swipe directions, and straightforward navigation once setup hurdles are out of the way.
Value is mixed but not poor: some reviewers call it fair or reasonably priced for what it does, while others think the price should be lower.
Value is highly context-dependent. Some reviewers saw real budget appeal, but others argued the FE makes less sense when discounted Galaxy Watch 6 or rival models are priced similarly.
Voice features are useful but limited, with commands helping for simple tasks even as reviewers call them less seamless or less smart than Apple.
Voice assistant use is serviceable, and one review specifically found Google Assistant faster and easier to understand than the default alternative.
Watch face feedback is positive, with reviewers liking the stock face and appreciating the available face customization.
Water resistance is good enough for swimming and everyday use, but several reviews note it stops short of the deeper-water credentials of tougher models.
Water resistance is a strength, with multiple reviews describing the FE as suitable for rain, swims, and general wet-condition use.
Wellness insights like Body Battery, stress, sleep, and morning reports are repeatedly described as useful and easy to act on.
Wellness insights go beyond raw numbers with sleep scoring, recovery-related context, and coaching-style interpretation, though the FE misses Samsung’s newer AI-driven Energy Score layer.
Wi-Fi helps with quicker downloads and Connect IQ access in the review that specifically mentioned it.
Workout variety is a major strength, with reviewers repeatedly calling out the huge number of sports profiles and broad training coverage.
Workout coverage is broad, with support for more than 100 exercise types and enough variety to satisfy most general fitness users.