Garmin’s next smartwatch has been leaked on its own website. . . and it’s the Garmin Lily 2

The first image of the Garmin Lily 2 has leaked online, a slimmer style-forward smartwatch with a narrower band than most of the best Garmin watches. It’s unclear when exactly we’ll be seeing the watch, but it’s likely to be unveiled at CES 2024, which starts on January 9.

The Garmin Lily 2 was accidentally revealed on Garmin’s Japanese website page. Detected via Notebookcheck, the skate can also be discovered at the Wayback Machine.

The Garmin Lily 2 follows in the footsteps of its predecessor by being a stylish watch with a slimmer strap, reminiscent of the look of old women’s watches. This is another one of the recent Garmin Venu 3 and Vivoactive 5, which offers similar sporty lifestyle features in a large, more traditional-looking sports watch. The leaked symbol features its finish in cream gold and coconut, we’re convinced it’s just one of several color combinations.

Given the timing of the leak and the fact that promotional photographs are in a position to be released live, we expect the Garmin Lily 2 to be unveiled soon. It will most likely debut at CES 2024, the global generation convention held in Las Vegas. from 9 January, as Garmin will be offered there.

The original Garmin Lily, which debuted three years ago, was a smartwatch aimed at women and surprisingly feature-light. It lacked onboard GPS, limiting its use for runners and cyclists, although it carried other fitness tracking features along with wellness stuff such as menstrual cycle tracking capabilities. There are currently no rumored specs or feature lists around for the watch’s next iteration, but we won’t have long to wait to find out what Garmin’s been cooking up. 

In our original Garmin Lily review, we found the watch surprisingly lacking in features, with the one capability that made Garmin a household name – GPS – missing from the slender watch. 

We said that with “many thin, gender-neutral devices on the market, such as Amazfit and Apple, it’s hard to justify paying so much for a watch that looks pretty but does less. “Hopefully, the Lily 2 can replace that by adding GPS, advanced core speed sensors, and some of Garmin’s fitness advancements evolved over the past few years, such as the Training Readiness Score.

Matt is TechRadar’s expert on all things fitness, wellness and wearable tech. A former staffer at Men’s Health, he holds a Master’s Degree in journalism from Cardiff and has written for brands like Runner’s World, Women’s Health, Men’s Fitness, LiveScience and Fit&Well on everything fitness tech, exercise, nutrition and mental wellbeing.

Matt is an avid runner, a former kickboxer, who rarely pushes back much to weird categories of yoga and insists that everyone stretch each and every morning. When he’s not educating or writing about fitness and fitness, he can be found reading thick fantasy books with lots of dummy letters.

CMF Watch Pro review via Nothing: A smartwatch that’s great value for money, but not perfect

Wow! Apple Watch 9 locks in at a record price of $32 on Amazon

Rainbow Six Siege is toying with more attacker nerfs, and players aren’t happy

TechRadar is from Future US Inc. , a leading foreign media organization and virtual publisher. Visit our corporate website.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *