Smartwatches

Huawei Watch 2 vs. LG Watch Sport

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New Atlas compares the features and specs of the Android Wear 2.0-running Huawei Watch 2 (left) and LG Watch Sport
Always-on display
Band material
Battery
Build
Cellular option
Color options
Dimensions
Display resolution
Display size
Display type
GPS
Heart-rate tracking
New Atlas compares the features and specs of the Android Wear 2.0-running Huawei Watch 2 (left) and LG Watch Sport
Android Pay (NFC)
Smartphone compatibility
Starting price (full retail)
Release
Scrolling input
Software
Swappable bands
Water resistance
View gallery - 21 images

With Google's rebooted Android Wear 2.0 recently launching, we've now seen a few significant Wear smartwatch launches, for the first time in over a year. Let's see how the features and specs of two of those watches, the Huawei Watch 2 and LG Watch Sport, compare.

Size

Dimensions

These are two large smartwatches: Consider that each measures 25-percent wider than even the bigger of the two sizes of the Apple Watch. That all but completely pigeonholes these two as men's watches.

The Huawei Watch 2 does, however, measure 11-percent thinner.

Build

Build

The standard (Sport, far left) Huawei Watch 2 has a ceramic bezel, while the Classic variant (center) replaces that with stainless steel – the same as the LG Watch Sport.

Colors

Color options

These are your color options. Note that the gray model of the standard Huawei Watch 2 is only available with Bluetooth (no cellular).

Band material

Band material

The Classic Huawei Watch 2 stands out with a default leather band (though it also has some rubbery plastic on its inside).

Swappable bands

Swappable bands

You can only swap bands on the Classic Huawei Watch, with any standard 22-mm strap.

Display size

Display size

The LG Watch Sport gives you a 33-percent bigger screen (measured by area).

Display resolution

Display resolution

Both screens are very sharp, though the Watch Sport's pixel density is 7-percent sharper.

Display type

Display type

Both use OLED (or P-OLED) display panels.

Always-on display

Always-on display

Both give you the option of leaving a dimmed version of the display on at all times, though at least for the LG Watch Sport, that means its battery might not make it through a full day.

Scrolling input

Scrolling input

The LG Watch Sport uses a knockoff of Apple's Digital Crown, where you wind the button to scroll through lists, messages and menus. (While it's wholly unoriginal, it's a nice addition to Android Wear.) Huawei didn't include any equivalent to its 2017 smartwatches.

Water resistance

Water resistance

Both have strong IP68 water resistance.

Standalone cellular

Cellular option

One of the hallmarks of Android Wear 2.0 is that it plays nice with LTE-connected watches, including a phone-free/onboard version of the Play Store.

The Watch Sport is cellular-connected by default, while the standard Huawei Watch 2 is sold in both LTE and Bluetooth-only models. The Huawei Watch 2 Classic doesn't offer a cellular option.

GPS

GPS

Both have built-in GPS (including the Huawei Watch 2 Classic), to track your treks without a phone.

Heart-rate tracking

Heart-rate tracking

All versions of the watches also have a heart-rate sensor (which was conspicuously absent from the Sport's smaller sibling).

Mobile payments

Android Pay (NFC)

Both watches have the necessary NFC chip to enable Android Pay for wallet-free payments.

Battery

Battery

There's more to battery life than battery capacity, so you'll want to take this with a few grains of salt.

One thing worth noting is Huawei added a low-power mode to the Watch 2, which can supposedly extend its uptimes to 25 days (at the expense of losing all "smart" features).

Phone compatibility

Smartphone compatibility

Both are compatible with Android phones (naturally) as well as iPhones, though with the latter you might lose some perks like a smartphone-run Google Fit app.

Software

Software

Both run the recently-launched Android Wear 2.0.

Release

Release

The Huawei Watch 2 will be launching sometime in April.

Starting price (full retail)

Starting price (full retail)

We don't yet have US pricing info on the Huawei Watch 2, though for reference's sake, its European costs are €329 for the Bluetooth Watch 2, €379 for its LTE variant and €399 for the Classic. While direct currency exchanges rarely predict US pricing, those currently translate to around US$348, $401 and $422, respectively.

For more, you can check out New Atlas' hands-on with the Huawei Watch 2 and our full review of the LG Watch Sport.

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2 comments
Lee Greb
It would be a boon if the comparison analysis stated the country of manufacture.
Douglas Bennett Rogers
Might get one when I see it on Tracfone.