Bracelet | yes |
---|---|
Bracelet Width | 0.54 in |
Clips | no |
Colour of product |
|
---|
Bluetooth | yes |
---|---|
Bluetooth version | 4.0 |
GPS | no |
NFC | no |
Battery life | 7.0 day |
---|---|
Battery type | Lithium Polymer |
Charging via USB | yes |
Display | yes |
---|---|
Screen resolution | 128 x 32 |
Display type | OLED |
Water resistant | yes |
---|---|
Fully Waterproof | no |
IP code (level of dust/water resistance) | IP54 |
Accelerometer | yes |
Calorie counter | yes |
Distance meter | yes |
Pedometer | yes |
Sleep reading | yes |
Touchscreen | no |
Vibration alarm | yes |
Watch | yes |
Compatible devices |
|
---|
What happens when a gaming peripheral maker produces a smartwatch? Things get interesting. Let's take a look at the Razer Nabu Watch.
This fitness tracker for gamers could use a level up
The Razer Nabu X is a competent fitness tracker with unique social and gaming features, but it currently falls short.
The Razer Nabu Watch is an aggressively styled smartwatch that tracks basic fitness stats and delivers push notifications, but it's uncomfortable and inaccurate.
Cheap doesn't cut it
Razer’s Nabu can’t be called a Smartwatch but it is a watch that’s smarter than your typical timepiece. But is it smart enough to justify a hefty price?
Once primarily a PC accessories manufacturer, Razer has slowly moved into other technology spaces over the past decade since their restructuring in the
“For gamers, by gamers” is the kind of motto that sells liquid-cooled spec-obsessed towers, headsets, rumbling lounge chairs, and ergonomic mice with more buttons than a double-breasted suit. Razer, however, has these words stamped into the back of its wearable Nabu, which it’d like to remind us is not a smartwatch,…
This watch has two batteries: one to tell the time, and another for step tracking and notifications.
The $150 smartwatch makes a statement with its design, but it's otherwise basic.