Skip to main content

Wearable

The Verge is covering the rapidly evolving world of wearables. We test everything from smartwatches like the Apple Watch, to smart glasses like the Meta Ray-Bans, to fitness trackers like the Oura Ring to find out which ones deliver on their promises. Follow along to find out whether covering our bodies in screens and sensors can actually make us smarter and healthier.

Victoria Song
Victoria Song
Snap CEO Evan Spiegel takes shots at the Ray-Ban Meta glasses.

In a podcast with David Senra, Spiegel says, “I think Meta needed to partner with [Essilor]Luxottica because the Meta brand, I think, is not something people want anywhere near their face.” He’s not wrong. I hear that all the time from y’all in my smart glasses coverage — and the facial recognition controversy hasn’t helped.

Ben McKenzie vs. cryptoBen McKenzie vs. crypto
David Pierce
Victoria Song
Victoria Song
The ACLU wants Meta to just say no to facial recognition glasses.

The civil rights organization and 75 other groups published an open letter to Mark Zuckerberg, urging him to “immediately halt and publicly disavow” plans for a reported facial recognition feature on its Ray-Ban smart glasses. It’s unsurprising that privacy advocates are wary, especially since documents show Meta originally planned to launch the feature during public unrest.

Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
T-maxxing.

I don’t make a habit of featuring Verge writers in the comment of the day, but since Nilay’s testosterone levels were the impetus for Victoria Song’s latest Optimizer column, on Whoop’s hunt for new health metrics, it only felt fair to air his response.

Nilay Patel:

Cmon everyone wants to see what I’m like jacked on literally 10x the testosterone

Get the day’s best comment and more in my free newsletter, The Verge Daily.

Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O'Brien
Apple is reportedly testing four different designs for its smart glasses.

The next big product category Apple is supposedly tackling is display-free smart glasses to rival Meta’s. But the design has yet to be locked in, according to Cupertino whisperer Mark Gurman. The company might launch some or all four of the designs under consideration:

A large rectangular frame, reminiscent of Ray-Ban Wayfarers

A slimmer rectangular design, similar to the glasses worn by Apple Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook

Larger oval or circular frames

A smaller, more refined oval or circular option

Why your Whoop might tell you to up your testosterone

Whoop and Oura are health tech trendsetters. But hurtling toward innovation can have some unintended ripple effects.

Victoria Song
Here are the best Apple Watch deals available right nowHere are the best Apple Watch deals available right now
Brandon Widder and Sheena Vasani
Continuous glucose monitoring made me continuously crazy

MAHA is obsessed with these wearables — for all the wrong reasons.

Victoria Song
Victoria Song
Victoria Song
Whoop gives a whoop about what now?

After scoring $575 million in funding earlier this week, Whoop is suing Bevel — a startup that has marketed itself as “Whoop, but for the Apple Watch.” The complaint centers on whether Bevel copied Whoop’s app, a claim the former denies. Can’t lie… I feel like I’ve seen 10,000 versions of this app design over the last decade.

Andrew Liszewski
Andrew Liszewski
This watch straps a playable version of Mega Man 2 to your wrist.

The latest addition to My Play Watch’s collection of gaming wearables is a $79.99 Mega Man version, available for preorder soon, with themed watch faces, sounds, and matching straps. Instead of distracting you with notifications it includes a custom version of the NES’ Mega Man 2 playable on the watch’s small touchscreen.

Three copies of My Play Watch’s Mega Man-themed wearable.
The Mega Man: My Play Watch can be customized with themed watch faces and straps.
Image: My Play Watch
How the Apple Watch defined modern health tech

Digital health screeners weren’t a thing until the Apple Watch. It’s shaped how we think about wearables ever since.

Victoria Song
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
April Fools’ 2026: Oura’s smart ring for pets.

The Oura Ring Pet isn’t real, but based on the Instagram comments, some people really want this.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
April Fools’ 2026: Yahoo’s Scroll Stopper stops doomscrolling.

One way to reduce screen time? The Scrōll Stoppr by Yahoo. Who knows if it actually ships, but these are listed in the TikTok Shop at a price of $4.99 with free shipping for anyone who’s tried every other way to put their phone down.

Thomas Ricker
Thomas Ricker
Garmin watches now help with birth control.

Not because they’re so ugly, it’s because Garmin wearables that track skin temperature during sleep — like the Fenix 8 and Forerunner 970 — can now feed that data to the FDA-cleared Natural Cycles birth control app to show the wearer’s daily fertility status.

Time to get busy.
Time to get busy.
Image: Natural Cycles
Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Nothing might be the next company to get into AI glasses.

Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman says Nothing plans on launching AI smart glasses during the first half of 2027. The upcoming glasses will reportedly come with built-in cameras, microphones, and speakers, while offloading AI processing to a user’s smartphone and the cloud.

Victoria Song
Victoria Song
Order, order — no smart glasses in Philly court sessions.

Starting Monday, wearing smart glasses with audio or video recording is verboten in Philadelphia’s courts. That includes prescription smart glasses. Violators could be arrested and face contempt charges. This follows other state bans and a judge reprimanding Mark Zuckerberg’s team for wearing smart glasses during Meta’s social media addiction trial.

Andrew Liszewski
Andrew Liszewski
Polar’s new durable Street X is one of its most affordable smartwatches.

The Polar Grit X2 Pro smartwatch that debuted in 2024 is now $999.99, but the company’s new Street X has launched at $249.99. It features a 1.28-inch AMOLED touchscreen, built-in GPS with a compass and barometer, a skin temperature sensor, fitness tracking for over 170 sports and activities, and up to 10 days of battery life.

If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement.

Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
Ultrahuman is back in the US, starting with the Ring Pro.

Its smart rings disappeared from sale following a patent dispute with Oura, but the Ring Pro has been cleared to launch thanks to a redesign. Preorders start today from $399, with some discounts for early buyers and no ongoing subscription cost, but the rings won’t ship until May 15th.

If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement.

The Ultrahuman Ring Pro, positioned atop its Pro Charging case.
The Ring Pro has a 15-day battery life, and a tweaked design to avoid Oura’s patent claim.
Image: Ultrahuman
Victoria Song
Victoria Song
Strava hates to see Le Monde coming.

This time, the French newspaper found the location of an aircraft carrier because a sailor jogging on deck was recording their run on Strava. This isn’t even the first time. In 2024, Le Monde also found President Emmanuel Macron’s bodyguards also leaked his location by tracking workouts on the platform.

Thomas Ricker
Thomas Ricker
Garmin gets WhatsApp’d.

Garmin users can now compose and reply to WhatsApp messages directly from their watch after downloading the app, just like Apple Watch owners. DC Rainmaker has all the details.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Apple’s home hardware engineering boss is going to Oura.

The exec, Brian Lynch, will be Oura’s SVP of hardware engineering, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reports.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Beats and Nike team up for a pair of Powerbeats Pro 2 earbuds.

When Victoria Song reviewed the Beats Powerbeats Pro 2, she found a lot to like about their slimmer ear hook and wireless charging, even before their iOS 26 upgrade. Now, Beats is launching this color-splashed collaboration, which is at least bright, even if it lacks the internal hardware updates of Apple’s new AirPods Max headphones.

They’ll go on sale on Nike.com, Apple.com, and other stores on Friday, March 20th, for $249.99.

If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement.

Promotional image of the Nike Powerbeats Pro 2
Image: Beats
My fitness tracker is a secret weapon against my chronic illness

Disabled folks are using their devices to manage long Covid, POTS, and more — and it’s working

Arielle Duhaime-Ross
Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Samsung is still planning to launch its first smart glasses in 2026.

We still don’t know much about the AR glasses Samsung is building with Google, but Jay Kim, Samsung’s EVP of the company’s mobile division, tells CNBC the device will connect to your phone and have a built-in camera at “your eye level.”

Kim added that Samsung aims to launch the product this year, echoing what the company said in January.