Garmin Venu 2 Plus review: Packed with fitness and smart features, but is that enough?
Finding the right fitness watch can be a challenge for many users. There are several preferences to keep in mind. Do you prefer form over features? Is there a budget limitation? What are the essential smart features that you would not compromise? What about the fitness features?
My preferred smartwatch is one with a sleek fit, accurate steps and fitness tracking, and some smart features. The Garmin Venu 2 Plus, which I’ve used for two weeks, is one such device that fits the bill. But is it the right fitness watch for you? Here’s my review
Garmin Venu 2 Plus review: Yes, it’s expensive
The Garmin Venu 2 Plus is not a watch for those looking to get a budget fitness device. This is for someone looking for a premium fitness watch and wants something that looks good. The version I got for review has a striking gold stainless steel bezel with an ivory case and a silicone band. There’s also a Silver and Slate coloured version for those who find the gold overwhelming.
The gold and ivory colour tones give the watch a break from a sea of monotonous black smartwatches. (Image Source: The Indian Express/ Shruti Dhapola)
I liked the gold and ivory colour tones, given it is a break from the monotonous black smartwatches I end up reviewing. It looks stylish enough to wear with an evening outfit, say even when I wear a sari, etc. The only thing I don’t like about the Venu 2 Plus is that it looks a little big for my wrist size. The company says this is suited for those with 135 mm to 200 mm wrists, but it looks a bit larger on mine (139 mm wrists, I measured).
Still, the 1.3-inch diameter display (416 x 416 pixels resolution) is one of the best you’re getting, and there’s plenty of space to view notifications, messages, etc. This is a coloured AMOLED display with an Always-On mode.
Garmin Venu 2 Plus review: The smart features
It also comes with some smart features, including the ability to take calls on the watch. I took quite a few on this, and the audio quality can sometimes be a bit iffy. However, people on the other side heard me clearly on most occasions, though my colleague pointed out that my voice did sound different. The watch must stay connected to your phone. This one does not have LTE. But as long as the phone is within range, the call audio should be fine. I used this with an iPhone 12 Pro Max.
The Garmin Venu 2 Plus will also show notifications from your device, though you can only clear them from the device. There is no option for quick replies as such. This is something I don’t mind, given I view the Garmin device as more geared toward fitness. Plus, I’ve never been entirely comfortable responding to notifications from a smartwatch.
You can also store some songs from Spotify on the device, but doing this can be a tedious task. (Image Source: The Indian Express/ Shruti Dhapola)
It can connect to WiFi on its own. You can also control music from the watch, and install Spotify on the device. I could control Spotify music playing on my iPhone from the watch, though you will have to link it via the Garmin Connect app. You will need a premium account on Spotify to access some features.
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You can also store some songs from Spotify on the device (650 in total). But this proved to be quite a task, no matter what I did. The app kept insisting that I need to set up WiFi to download music to the watch. No matter how much installing-uninstalling I did, nothing seemed to fix the issue. For the record, when connecting WiFi, the watch showed the connection was successful. Eventually, I just gave up on this downloading music bit. I’m assuming there’s some technical reason why this didn’t work for me, because it worked fine with other Garmin devices, I’ve reviewed earlier.
Garmin Venu 2 Plus review: The fitness bit
There’s no doubt that this is an excellent fitness watch. There are several modes here to keep the average user happy. From swimming to running to treadmill, strength training to golf workouts, the watch covers more than enough for users. Step tracking is largely accurate, and yes, the watch will remind you if you’ve been stationary for too long. This is something I’ve needed more of in the last week, as I recover from yet another viral. The watch can also track stress levels, and it is mostly accurate. It figured out I was getting stressed while trying to sort out this WiFi issue. It can track period cycles, hydration levels, etc for those who like to get in deep.
The Garmin Venu 2 Plus comes with several fitness tracking modes. (Image Source: The Indian Express/ Shruti Dhapola)
I used the watch for swimming sessions and found the data largely accurate. It would sometimes add a jump to the distance count even when I was still, though the final number it reflected for the total distance I swam was accurate. It was accurate with data around walks and hikes. The auto-detect feature is spot-on, especially when you are out on a walk. The one bit that got the watch confused was the number of floors I climbed. While I was out during a trip to the mountains in Himachal, the watch was convinced I was climbing a lot of floors. I wasn’t, I was just on a very slow, rickety drive uphill.