ITEL is known for offering a price-pack smartphone on a budget, but recently it has started sinking its toes in other consumer electronics categories such as earphones and smartwatches. Its latest offering includes a smartwatch value Rs 2,199With state -of -the -art hardware. Smartwatch, namely, Itel claims tons of facilities underlying to help unicorn max, a metal body, a large amoled display, and day-to-day activities.
But does Itel promise on this aggressive pricing? After using the watch for more than two weeks, here is my Itel Unicorn Max Review.
Design and performance
Itel Unicorn Max comes in a long and relatively narrow box. Inside, everything is well placed in compartments, including smart watchA Metal lease, Magnetic USB-A Charging CableA Tools to adjust length lengthAnd a user manual,

Since the strap was too long for my wrist, I adjusted its length using a dedicated tool coming with the clock. While I found the equipment directly to adjust the length, regular watch stores may also be able to help you with strap. To accommodate the length, you just have to place the lease on the tool, push the needles out of both sides of the akwar, and then start the link again to make the strap smaller.
Moving on the design and build, the smartwatch has an all-metal body, which includes two buttons on the right. Both buttons are satisfactorily touchable and are quite large for easy pressure. The top button serves as a back button to navigate in the previous menu, while the bottom button provides quick access to sports mode from anywhere in the UI.
Sitting between these two buttons is a rotating crown, which can be used to scroll up or down within the UI. The crown also produces a satisfactory click sound when pressed or rotated. Even it helps in changing the face of the clock, which I found extremely convenient.
During my two weeks of use, I got weight on the high side (because it weighs 55 grams), although it did not cause anxiety in the long run. This is not heaviest, as premium smartwatch such as Apple Watch Ultra 2 (61.4 g) and Samsung Watch Ultra (94 g) is very high. Note, the increased weight of premium watches makes sense as they pack more sensors and hardware for better durability.
One of the main attractions of Itel Unicorn Max is its 1.43-inch AMOLED display, which comes with 466 x 466 resolution, 1,000 NITs brightness and 60Hz refresh rate support. For experience, the AMOLED display produces vibrant colors and dark blacks, causing on-screen materials to be alive with great opposite levels. Even under direct sunlight, the screen is well -known at the level of full brightness and lasts up to the high “1,000 NITS shine” claim.

The screen resolution is higher than enough, and I did not face issues with viewing experience. The clock always supports the display (AOD) and when it kicks it, it goes to the face of the clock. You can schedule AOD, which can help preserve the battery.
However, it is worth indicating that I cannot find a display to turn on by double-tapping. It can only start using the gesture by awakening the gesture or by pressing the rotating crown. It is not a deluge, but it definitely adds the additional level of convenience. In addition, ITEL Unicorn Max does not support auto-brightness, so you have to manually adjust the brightness according to the light of the environment.
Application experience
To avail the most benefit of Itel Unicorn Max, users can install the IPULSE app on their smartphone from the Play Store or App Store. I found especially interesting that the watch works directly out of the box, thanks to its custom real-time operating system (RTO). This means that the app mainly works to see health data on a large screen.
I tested the clock with OnePlus 12 (review), and the app went smoothly. To begin with, you have to sign up by creating an account in the app, provide the necessary permissions, and then the watch has to be linked to the app via Bluetooth.

Here are the main features of the app, as well as with my experience of using them:
- Bluetooth calling: You can take out the outgoing and upcoming phone calls directly from the watch, provided that the phone is connected to your phone. In my experience, speakers bends more towards high-level sounds and decrease depth and high volume levels, which is expected to look at the small form of the clock.
- push notifications: You can choose and allow apps on your phone to send notifications in your watch. Although notifications are obtained on time, there may be some discrepancies. Watch sometimes displays duplicate notifications from every app, whether it is WhatsApp, Message, Instagram, and more. Secondly, the watch does not display any emojis if there is one in information.
- Camera Control: Choosing this mode converts the watch into a shutter button, after which you can keep your phone away and snap the shot using the button on the watch display. Although it works well, the app uses its own camera interfaces and processing, which is quite inferior to the quality using your phone’s default camera app. Images are granular, less wide, and extended out.
- Dial Center (Clock Facial): App offer over 200 clock face Spread in various categories. Many clock faces are actually done well, while some taki appear. By default, you get six clock faces already installed in the clock.

In my two weeks of the use of the clock, the first week was sailing smoothly until the beginning of the second week, when the app started to crash in the background. This used to happen when the clock was re -added on the phone several times after being useless for a while, and while opening the app.

Performance and UI
Itel is running at the origin of Unicorn Max Dual-core processorWatch showed no signals of legs or geiters when navigating through software, opening apps or touchscreen. Given the price of smartwatch, this is a very large plus point. However, animation may be a tad janoci when scrolling pages using the crown.
Navigating the software is equally easy and works with swipe gestures. From the main screen, you can swipe down to reach quick settings, swipe to see information from your phone, and can swipe the correct pages such as activity tracker, heart rate tracker, spo2 tracker, weather, etc. Some major apps include flashlight, calculators, voice recorders and music players.

Now let’s take a look at various activity and health monitoring facilities:
- Daily Steps and Calorie Tracker: This allows you to keep a tab on a day walking in a day, burning calories, workout time, and distance. You can also set a daily goal for each of these aspects. In some examples, I found that the steps were inflated, which I found out on each wrist wearing Unicorn Max and my old fitbit uses 2. Itel Smartwatch showed 345 steps more for equal distances.
- Heart rate measurement: The clock can track the heart rate by opening the menu of the heart rate. You can also allow it to run continuously for accurate data tracking.
- SPO2 measurement: To know the level of blood oxygen concentration in the body, the SPO2 tracker gets work, although its accuracy may be unexpected. Like a heart rate sensor, it may be allowed to run throughout the day in the background.
- Stress Tracker: Through the boundaries of 1 to 99, the clock determines the level of tension. The higher the number, the more stressed the person will be. It tracks this metric through heart rate changes.
- Sleep Tracker: Sleep tracker sleeps in record three types of categories – awake, light sleep and deep sleep. Depending on the sleep pattern in a day, it provides a graph that shows the total sleep time and interval-wise sleeping pattern.
- Exercise mode: The watch claims to offer more than 100 exercises and sports mode, which seems to be a little excessive. The main categories include outdoor sports, indoor sports, ball games, dance, combat sports and holiday games. Because I consider many of these mode highly, that some categories have activities like hot air ballooning, horsepower and car racing.
Once the track and saved, each metric can be seen with an app supported on the smartphone.
Overall, Itel Unicorn Max performed well properly during my review, although a bug auto-switch by the time format (from the 12-hour format from the 24-hour format), which could be annoying to fix all the time.
Battery and charging
Battery endurance Itel was impressive on Unicorn Max. At a full fee, the clock lasted for five days, which is capable of 12 hours a day with AOD, Bluetooth is capable, and is associated with the phone at all times. To charge, it took me about an hour to charge the watch completely.
Charging the clock is simple – simply attach the cable backwards, where magnetic pins safely hold it in place. However, the USB-A charging cable may be slightly longer, especially for situations where the adapter is located at a high level, increasing the risk of loosening the pin from the clock.
Decision

Itel Unicorn Max is well made, with a smooth metal design with steel strap, an IP68 rating for dust and water resistance, and with gorilla glass safety, cover all major aspects of durability, with gorilla glass safety. Performance, which is important for smartwatch experience, is alive and provides sufficient glow under direct sunlight. The battery is well adapted, which always lasts for five days with a competent-on display (AOD).
The clock can measure persistent heart rate, monitor SPO2 levels, and track sleep, making it an impressive offering of just Rs 2,199. However, the main issues are located with the IPULSE app and sometimes with the notification, which can be both incredible. Hopefully, the future updates will solve the crashed problems of the app. Overall, the watch performs well as a standalone device, but participates in issues when connected by phone.
Editor’s rating: 7.5 / 10
Professionals
- Sophisticated and stylish design
- perform live
- Bluetooth calling
- Solid battery life with AOD
Shortcoming
- Average app experience
- Inconsistent step count
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