Testseek.co.uk have collected 352 expert reviews of the Samsung SM-R732 Gear S2 Classic and the average rating is 78%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Samsung SM-R732 Gear S2 Classic.
November 2015
(78%)
352 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(89%)
598 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
780100352
The editors liked
Classy
Understated design
Unique
Clever rotating bezel
Works with all Android 4.4 phones
Well implemented bezel control
Good build quality
Always-on screen option
Slick bezel controls
Lovely display
Light but well built
Mostly fast performance
Rotating bezel feels great
Well-made
Interesting
Fairly intuitive UI
The 3G version of the Gear S2 has all the features and design of Samsung's Wi-Fi-only S2 smartwatch
But adds a speakerphone and built-in GPS along with full standalone phone and data service
The Gear S2 has an eye-catching design
A clever rotating bezel that's actually useful
Beautiful display
Solid health tracking and slightly better battery life than other high-end smartwatches. Plus
It works with a variety of Android phones
Bright
Sharp display
Rotating bezel is the best wearable feature yet
Not limited to Samsung handsets
Smarter round design
Works with many Android 4.4 phones
Excellent screen
Innovative rotating bezel
Slick Tizen UI
Rotating bezel FTW
Simple
Speedy to use OS
Good battery life
Great Design
Solid Build Materials
Excellent Display
Super-Good Battery Life
Tons of Sensors and Features
Beautiful round design
Elegant
Fluid user interface
Rotating bezel is a true innovation
2-3 day battery life
The editors didn't like
Some features still Samsung
Only
Expensive
Poor third-party app support
Huawei Watch aces design
Tizen needs better third-party app support
Not quite 4GB storage
Very expensive
Very poor apps selection
Battery life just OK with always-on screen
Slow voice commands
No iPhone support
It's more expensive
Requires a connected data plan to pair with
And runs out of battery life quickly on cellular. It's bulkier
Too. Also
The Gear S2 3G doesn't have that many great apps
And it doesn't yet work with iPhones
Fewer available apps or seamless connected services than Android Wear and Apple Watch
Published: 2015-11-18, Author: Will , review by: newatlas.com
Abstract: We reviewed the Samsung Gear S2 soon after it launched, but we now have its better-looking fraternal twin, the Gear S2 Classic, in house. Let's take a quick look at Samsung's US$50 more expensive smartwatch that looks like a real watch.Apart from their ex...
Samsung's Gear S2 Classic is one of the best wearables of 2015, boasting slick design, a smart and intuitive interface and perfectly tuned controls. Aside from a couple of little issues such as frustrating mapping, the Tizen OS is a solid alternative to A...
Samsung's Gear line has always been a pretty good lineup of smartwatches, but nothing really stellar. That changes with the Gear S2 where Samsung clearly went back to the drawing board in every way and looked to not just provide what they thought was t...
Abstract: Smartwatches really only came onto the scene in a major way in the past two years — Google, Apple, and Samsung are all hoping it'll be the next big computing platform. Since then, we've seen lots of manufacturers try different strategies for strapping a c...
Modern, genderneutral design, Rotating bezel is both cool and convenient, Good performance, responsive UI, Decent battery life, even with alwayson display enabled, Can store music and play it over Bluetooth, Optional 3G connectivity, Compatible with most
Screen becomes somewhat unresponsive when wet, Proprietary wrist bands, standard 20mm ones are incompatible (does not apply to Gear S2 Classic), Selection of apps and watchfaces feels limited, Voice commands fail to work on rare occasions
If the Gear S2 is any indication of where Samsung is headed with its Gear series, then we'd say that the lineup is on the right track. Finally, we have a Samsung smartwatch with the potential to appeal to a broad audience -- both men and women who aren't...
So, will the Gear S2 be the smartwatch you turn to? By itself, there's a whole lot of Swiss army knife on the table, but the phone compatibility issues and some overbearing cruft on the software might tempt you to compare and contrast with other platfo...
I'm quietly impressed by the Gear S2. Samsung has created something which actually feels like a watch on your wrist, not a clunky smartwatch, and its deep control over Tizen makes many of the regular interactions you have with it a pleasure. That often ca...
Accessible and durable design, Premium version available for those who want it, at a price, Manageable size makes it suitable for most wrists, Unique input method with rotating bezel is useful, Battery life is quite impressive, Good display experience, Sm
Limited application support is a let down, No auto brightness setting with the display
Samsung gets a lot right with their first round face smartwatch, including a unique and useful input method, but the limited applications that currently support the Samsung Gear S2 is what may ultimately give the edge to the competition...
The Gear S2 has an eye-catching design, a clever rotating bezel that's actually useful, beautiful display, solid health tracking and slightly better battery life than other high-end smartwatches. Plus, it works with a variety of Android phones
Fewer available apps or seamless connected services than Android Wear and Apple Watch, no speakerphone, S-Voice commands work, but not as well as they could, not compatible with iPhone
Samsung's newest smartwatch reinvents itself with a whole new look and feel to create one of the best-designed wrist gadgets around -- but it still lacks the apps to set it above the competition...
Published: 2015-10-19, Author: Chris , review by: engadget.com
Spinning bezel interface is brilliant, Solid battery life, Sleek, minimal looks, Works with non-Samsung phones
Limited app selection, S Voice is hit-or-miss, Vibrations feel a little weak
Samsung's latest smartwatch packs a thoughtful, elegant interface made possible by a rotating bezel, with respectable battery life and a great screen rounding out the feature list. Alas, the sort of end-to-end control over hardware and software that made...