Testseek.com have collected 172 expert reviews of the Pebble Time and the average rating is 75%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Pebble Time.
August 2015
(75%)
172 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(83%)
18 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
750100172
The editors liked
Great battery life
Waterproof and well-suited for sports
Works with iOS and Android price
Sharp construction and a thin
Comfortable design
Always-on screen
Voice-dictation support in apps
Works with iPhone and Android
Clever at-a-glance timeline feature
Solid
All-steel construction
Boosted battery life should last over a week
30 meters water resistant
Always-on display
Works with iPhone and Android phones
Long battery life
Comfortable band
Attractive
Simple UI
Sophisticated design
Excellent battery life
Always-on color display
Voice-to-text functionality
Instantaneous notifications
Comfortable
Lots of apps
Syncs with Android or iOS
More grown-up design
Choice of bands
Longer battery life
Really great battery life. When it comes to smartwatches
Less is definitely more. The timeline metaphor is simple and understandable. Smart straps are a smart idea
Improved design
Display is always on
Visible outdoors
Symmetrical design is sleek
Elegantly simplistic
Color in the screen is good addition
Performance as snappy as ever
More than 8 apps can be installed at one time now
Voice input is as good as Android Wear
Tactile buttons are still useful
Reliable
Impressive battery life
Works on both Android and iOS
Always-on color e-paperdisplay
Display looks great under direct sunlight
Large app library
Unique Timeline interface reduces app clutter
Voice replies
Potential for more features via smartstraps
The editors didn't like
Not as fully polished as the Apple Watch or Android Wear
App ecosystem can be difficult to gauge
Not as unique as it was a year ago
Shorter battery life than previous Pebble watches
Not water resistant for swimming
Expensive for what it offers
Doesn't run all Pebble apps and watch faces
Design doesn't look much different than the less-expensive non-steel Pebble Time
Can't make phone calls
Fitness tracking is less accurate than rival wearables
Most notifications are too skimpy
No way to reply to email from watch
Can't do much with microphone
Cannot reply to notifications from watch
Microphone functionality limited
App store needs curation
Little reason to upgrade
Thick bezels
Same iffy notifications
Turns out design does matter
Pebble. The Time's screen and hardware both leave a lot to be desired. The interface is cutesy at the expense of being useful. If you're an iPhone user
Forget about it
Creaky hardware
Limited iOS capabilities
Limited voice control
Screen still has quite a bit of body and bezel around it
Not very easy to find good-looking replacement bands
IOS functionality is limited
Voice function doesn't extend to Google Now or Siri
Long backup, Utterly comfortable to wear, Waterresistant
Uneasy buttons, Cannot silence the phone
Pebble Time looks and fits more like a fitness tracker than a Smartwatch. The fact that it's display isn't touch enabled, its straps are of silicone and its battery lasts four times more leaves no doubt on that. It exudes no oomph, but does everything a S...
Feels solid, Epaper display, Great battery life, Lots of apps and watch faces
Successor already announced, Strap gets discoloured and ugly
The Pebble Time and Pebble Time Steel are wonderful tools, and once we started using them, we quickly fell into a routine. We didn't find much use for apps, since taking our phones out was often more sensible. Once we settled on one or two watch faces we...
Priced at Rs 9,999, the Pebble Time is an interesting smartwatch for those who want a simple connected device to read notifications without having to take out the smartphone all the time. With features such as a battery that can last for nearly five days...
Published: 2015-08-06, Author: Chris , review by: gizmodo.in
The Time Steel fixes most of my gripes about the regular Time - better buttons, better screen - and puts everything in a package that looks nicer, and feels better on my wrist,
That oversized bezel makes the whole thing feel a little calculator-watch cheap. The glass on the screen also seems susceptible to scratches - I've put two (tiny) marks on the screen in under a week, which doesn't bode well for the long run, Conclusion, I
If you want a Pebble watch, the Time Steel is the one to buy. For an extra $50, you get a watch that fixes everything wrong with the Time, in a far more attractive package. If you cant stomach the extra cash, Id seriously consider buying the original Pe...
Abstract: Are you a die-hard Apple fan or think there's much more to life beyond this smart piece of tech the world loves to flaunt? As much as we wish the Apple Watch could do more, we find it the best smartwatch available, given its polished design and wide range...
The Pebble Time is a solid upgrade over the first generation. Its improved looks, hardware, build quality, and platform reveal that the ambitious upstart is capable of coming up with a mature product, whose unique qualities allow it to go head on with the...
The Pebble Time is a great smartwatch to own, if the rest of the options out there in the market is a bit too pricey for your liking.(previously published in issue February 2016)...
Abstract: When the Pebble Time was announced, it was the only smart watch that truly moved me from my ground, while there are many other wearable brands out there that I also favored, but wearing a Pebble has made it almost impossible to move to other smartwatch es...
Abstract: When Pebble announced its very first smartwatch back in 2012, it broke Kickstarter's record back then, raising US$10.3 million in just over a month. Fast forward to February 2015, the company came back with a brand new smartwatch, the Pebble Time, which f...
Fab battery life, Comfortable, Small, comfy design
Pretty similar to Pebble Time, Apps are generally simple, low-key
The Pebble Time Steel is very similar to the Pebble Time, far more so than the original Pebble and its classed-up brother the Pebble Steel. We really don't think this is an essential upgrade, especially if you already own the cheaper version.However, the...