Garmin Marq are new hyper focused luxury tool smartwatches Digital Trends

Garmin Marq are new hyper focused luxury tool smartwatches Digital Trends

Garmin Marq are new, hyper focused luxury tool smartwatches Digital Trends Skip to main content Trending: Wordle Today October 24 Dell XPS 15 vs. Razer Blade 15 Best Dolby Atmos Soundbars iPhone 14 Plus Review Halo Rise vs. Nest Hub 2nd Gen HP Envy x360 13 (2022) Review Best Chromebook Printers Home MobileNews

Luxury Garmin Marq smartwatches are even more focused than the Apple Watch Ultra

By Andy Boxall October 11, 2022 Share Luxury traditional watches that serve, or are designed to look like they serve, a specific purpose are common, but Garmin’s Marq range always stood out because it brought that “luxury tool watch” approach to smartwatches. Now Garmin is back with the second generation of its Marq smartwatches and there are five models in all, each designed to work best in different environments. The five models are the Marq Athlete, the Marq Adventurer, the Marq Golfer, the Marq Aviator, and the Marq Captain. The names are mostly self-explanatory, with the Aviator being designed for pilots, the Captain for sailors, and the Golfer, which we assume will be for tennis players. Each has specific features that suit that activity or profession, and a design to match. Before we get into each one in more detail, what makes the Marq a luxury smartwatch? Each has a 46mm case made from grade-5 titanium and a domed sapphire crystal over the AMOLED screen, and all have custom-designed straps plus unique elements including ceramic bezels and special coatings. Garmin hasn’t forgotten what matters to the people who buy its watches, and promises the battery will last for 16 days in smartwatch mode before needing a recharge, or for 42 hours straight in GPS mode. Each Marq watch combines a touchscreen with physical buttons on the case so people can easily interact with the watch wearing gloves, or in the dark. Garmin has added multi-band GNSS technology and L1 and L5 GPS to ensure highly accurate positioning without excessive battery drain, along with all the usual health and fitness tracking, a heart rate monitor, storage space for music, and Garmin Pay mobile payments. A new Jet Lag Adviser feature provides a guide to quickly adjust to a new time zone.

The Marq 2nd-generation models

What about the individual smartwatches? The Marq Adventurer is probably the model with the widest appeal as it takes all the above features and puts them inside a luxury case attached to a hybrid leather and rubber strap, which should remain comfortable and sweat-free without looking too sporty. The bezel has compass markings, and both TopoActive and NextFork apps are pre-loaded for people who spend a lot of time exploring. The Marq Athlete has a vented rubber strap attached to the case, which has a Diamond-like Carbon (DLC) coating over the bezel for extra scratch resistance and a cool finish. The Marq Golfer comes with pre-installed guides to more than 42,000 golf courses and an autodetect mode, plus a wide range of golf-specific tracking features, and three Approach CT10 golf club sensors for club tracking, too. Like the Marq Golfer, the Marq Captain has a ceramic bezel and a nylon strap, plus it comes with features to control boat autopilot systems from the watch and a Regatta Timer. Finally, the Marq Aviator has a titanium bracelet with a locking clasp, and the ceramic bezel doubles as a 24-hour GMT feature. Waypoints can be added from a worldwide database, alerts on weather conditions specific to pilots are displayed, and there’s an option to use radar information on the watch’s maps. The Garmin Marq smartwatches vary in price from $1,900 to $2,400, which reflects the materials used, the build quality, and the breadth of highly specific features and apps that come with each. Garmin indicates all models will be available at some point in October, but has not provided an exact date. The announcement follows the release of the Apple Watch Ultra and the Samsung Galaxy Watch 5 Pro, two activity smartwatches that have shown the appeal of a “tool smartwatch” to mainstream buyers.

Editors' Recommendations

Apple’s canceled plans for a new cheap iPad sound incredible Does the iPad Pro (2022) come with an Apple Pencil? Does the Apple iPad (2022) have Face ID? Apple’s iPad lineup in 2022 misses the thing that used to make it great Does the Apple iPad (2022) have a headphone jack? Video-editing app LumaFusion to get a Galaxy Tab S8 launch There’s a very clear winner in our heated Pixel 7 vs. iPhone 14 camera battle Apple could launch a Frankenstein iPad Pro that runs macOS I’m ready for an iPad with macOS — I’m just waiting on Apple to be G-Shock’s first 40th anniversary watches glow in the dark Google Pixel 7 Pro vs Pixel 6 Pro: worth the upgrade? iPhone 14 Pro vs. Galaxy S22 Ultra camera comparison is a battle for the ages Gorgeous iPhone SE 4 renders show a huge design change — including a notch Samsung Galaxy S23 leak suggests a hugely disappointing upgrade Does the Apple iPad Pro (2022) have wireless charging? Here’s what you need to know The one insane thing keeping the 2022 iPad from being amazing First Pixel Watch teardown video shows it’s a repairability nightmare Galaxy S23: Everything we know about Samsung’s 2023 flagship
Share:
0 comments

Comments (0)

Leave a Comment

Minimum 10 characters required

* All fields are required. Comments are moderated before appearing.

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!