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Pebble is formally again with a brand new smartwatch, and, maybe extra importantly, a transparent philosophy for what the corporate needs to be.
The model simply introduced Pebble Round 2, a refreshed model of its much-loved 2015 Pebble Time Round.
Round 2 now includes a bigger 1.3-inch edge-to-edge e-paper show, a thinner 8.1mm case, and a battery lifetime of 10–14 days with an always-on display. But the watch itself is just half the story.
A comeback driven by philosophy, not scale
When I spoke to Pebble founder Eric Migicovsky, what stood out wasn’t bombast or big growth targets. Clearly, he learned from what happened to the brand a decade ago, and he’s intended to approach things differently this time around.
“There are no investors. We’re five people. We’re almost exclusively building this for ourselves.”
Eric describes Pebble today as the opposite of the “do-everything” smartwatch trend.
During our chat, he explained that the company isn’t trying to replace your phone or your Garmin watch, and it isn’t chasing triathletes, adventure athletes, or spec-sheet bragging rights.
Instead, Pebble wants to make things that feel calm, playful, and useful, with battery life measured in days, not hours.
“When you glance down your wrist, you’re supposed to smile a little bit,” he says.
(Image credit: Pebble)
To help people tell the difference between the brand’s wearables, unlike the recently announced Pebble Time 2, the new Round 2 doesn’t have a heart-rate sensor or speaker.
It does track steps and sleep, though, and delivers notifications, controls music, and supports thousands of community-built watchfaces and apps.
And crucially, Pebble is building in the open, with PebbleOS, the mobile app, and even hardware schematics being open source.
“The side door is open. People can come in, build, and help shape Pebble.”
Nostalgia, but deliberately modern
Pebble’s comeback inevitably leans on nostalgia, but this isn’t a reissue for the sake of it.
Eric admits he never found another smartwatch that felt right after Pebble went away, which is why he was thrilled when Google open-sourced PebbleOS, opening the door to a genuine revival, not just a brand resurrection.
And while Round 2 looks retro, it doesn’t feel stuck in the past, thanks to its higher-resolution displays, better power efficiency, and modern tooling that let Pebble finally make the Pebble Time Round he says they’ve always wanted.
“We fixed the bezel, we fixed the battery, we fixed the screen, and kept what made it special,” Eric added.
Pebble and AI: subtle, not shouty
Despite its throwback approach, Pebble isn’t ignoring AI; it’s just approaching it differently.
The Index 01 Ring already uses voice capture and on-device AI tools to act as “external memory.”
“I personally wanted ‘external memory’ for my brain,” Eric said, “Something simple, private, and calm. No product existed that did it the way we wanted, so we built it.”
Round 2 + Index 01 = goes well together
(Image credit: Pebble)
Pebble plans to bring that same infrastructure to its watches, so you can capture voice notes, ideas and reminders without turning your wrist into a notification slot machine, even if you don’t have the ring.
The company has already integrated Claude into some of its wearables, and Eric is openly considering more ambitious ideas, such as generating watch faces from voice prompts.
A platform that feels personal again
What makes Pebble’s revival interesting isn’t simply that a beloved smartwatch brand is back.
It’s that Pebble is offering something wearables have arguably lost: personality.
A watch that smiles back. A platform people can hack, tweak and play with. A company unapologetically building devices for humans who don’t want more noise.
What I like the most about Pebble is that it isn’t fighting for dominance like many other brands. Its goal is strictly to be part of the conversation.
And that might just be the most modern move of all.
The Pebble Round 2 can be pre-ordered at Pebble for $199 (~£147 / €169 / AU$295), with shipping expected in May 2026, and comes in gold, silver, and black, with 14mm and 20mm strap options.
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