Verizon GizmoWatch Disney Edition review
Earlier this year, my kindergartener wanted to start riding the bus. We’d tried a couple of times in the past, once in pre-K and once at the beginning of this school year. The first time, the bus didn’t show up two days in a row, and the second time we tried, it was almost two hours late dropping off my child. I was a nervous wreck, unable to get in touch with anyone at the bus company or the school, and it was one of the most deeply helpless feelings I’ve ever had. A bus would make our lives easier, but it hardly seemed worth it.
But she really wanted to try it, and when I had the opportunity to try out a Verizon GizmoWatch Disney Edition, I decided to give it one more shot. The $200 GizmoWatch is a GPS-enabled, cellular smartwatch with a very basic set of communication tools and some nice parental control via the associated GizmoHub app. I was mostly interested in the GPS part, and though the bus was blessedly (mostly) on-time this go around, the watch was crucial on frigid Midwestern days, saving me from standing out in below-zero-wind-chill weather on icy days when the bus is most likely to be late.
But as with a lot of tech these days, especially stuff ironically targeted at concerned parents like me, there’s a big privacy cost that many will be unwilling to pay, and the tradeoff isn’t obvious — it’s not like there’s a bullet point on Verizon’s product page saying “we can see everything you do.” We’re all used to making similar trade-offs for the convenience offered by the gadgets that enrich our lives, but in the case of the GizmoWatch (and really, just about any other kid-targeted smartwatch). More on that later, though — for now, let’s talk about what works about Verizon’s smartwatch for kids.
Verizon GizmoWatch Disney Edition Verizon The Verizon GizmoWatch Disney Edition is a great smartwatch for most kids, if you want a highly-controllable GPS watch that doesn’t try to distract your child while in school. Although a fine choice for younger kids who you may not want to buy a more complicated device for, it does come with an aggressive data collection policy that may have some parents wary. $200 at Verizon
What we liked about it
Solid interface with lots — but not too much — to do
The GizmoWatch watch face is probably most similar to the Apple Watch’s Portraits face, showing the time superimposed over an image, except the picture is of a character from one of Disney’s many properties, which does a fun little animation before settling in a static pose. If there’s a new message, a little bubble peeks down from the top, encouraging them to swipe down to see what you’ve sent them. They can also use that gesture to “check in” with you, which sends their current location, via a GizmoHub notification, to your phone.
Moving through the GizmoWatch’s options is easy and intuitive. Swiping left reveals the watch’s menu system — a few screens with four large, gridded icons each offering basic features like a calculator, messaging, calling (voice and video), a camera, theme selection, a to-do list, and there’s even a controller-shaped icon, though I wouldn’t call what it presents “games.” It’s really just a grid of character icons that, when you select them, make noises. Elsa makes frosty sounds, Darth Vader’s lightsaber fizzles to life and buzzes idly, Grogu makes… I don’t know, vaguely windy noises? I won’t lie to you; it’s awful and tinny the way all battery-powered children’s toys are, and may inspire you to turn the sound off entirely.
Through the GizmoHub app you can communicate with your kid using video calls, phone calls, and text messages. There’s no way to type out responses on the GizmoWatch itself, but your kid can reply to your texts with audio recordings, pre-set messages and emoji, including, of course, the poop emoji. Mine has sent me so many poops.
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These options were enough to hold my daughter’s attention for a little while, but none seem designed to draw her attention back to the watch over and over again. And that’s a good thing, especially for younger children. That’s not to say they won’t find themselves preoccupied with it — I definitely pored intensely over a Richard Scarry book’s chaotic representation of a dog driving a sports car through a busy street scene as a kid — but there’s nothing to activate the addictive part of our brains that respond to so many mobile games that are essentially just legalized gambling for children.
Surprisingly decent smartphone app with good GPS tracking
On the parent side, you get a lot of control over the GizmoWatch with the GizmoHub smartphone app. To me, the most key feature outside of GPS tracking is school mode, which limits your child to checking the time, sending you their location and checking their to-do list. They can still get in touch in an emergency by holding down the flush SOS button for five seconds, though I thought that was a touch unintuitive and requires practicing it with your kid often, especially if they’re very young, to be sure they know how to use it.
You’re in full control of the contacts on the watch, which is nice — you can set up a handful of people that can be called or texted, up to nine additional people besides you — though I wish you could designate more than one emergency contact.
Then there’s the GPS tracking. It’s surprisingly well-implemented, letting you check the watch’s location throughout the day by tapping the little location pin icon on the main screen, while an icon below that repeatedly pings the watch so you can watch it move in semi-real time. It’s only accurate within a block or two most of the time, but that’s close enough for blues, and you can set up location-based notifications that notify you when your child enters or leaves a circle you draw on the map in the GizmoHub app.
If you lose the watch, you can ping it like an Apple Watch and it’ll play whatever the currently-selected ringtone is until you find it and press the button on the side. The so-called “Find Gizmo” button is in a weird spot in the app, which is a shame. You know the watch is going to get lost, and you won’t realize it until that desperate 5-10 minutes before it’s time to leave for school and you’re also looking for a missing left shoe or the folder with the field trip permission slip that’s due today. It’s not the best time to be fiddling with an app, trying to remember where the heck that option is.
Finally, there are nice touches like the ability to remotely turn off the watch, adjust its volume and even set it to auto-answer calls so you can check out what’s happening around them if they aren’t answering.
Sturdy design and decent battery life
Being intended to be worn by a child, the GizmoWatch had better be able to take a beating, and so far, it seems to have held up well against my daughter (though admittedly, she’s a gentle soul, whose wrath is reserved primarily for breaking crayons in two). That’s good for me, because the AMOLED display lives beneath a glass screen, which is the most obviously fragile part of the construction — the rest of the housing is plastic.
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Unfortunately, or maybe not, the screen scratches incredibly easily, so Verizon may have used a softer glass composition, which should help it hold up to abuse a little better (conventional wisdom says screens that rate higher on the Mohs hardness scale tend to shatter more easily). But glass is still glass, so contingencies like a good screen protector case aren’t a bad idea. I haven’t used any, but this one on Amazon seems like a solid bet.
The soft TPU watch band is more than long enough for most kids’ wrists — it even fits my own wrist — though it might be a little too long for particularly small ones. Thankfully, it’s also replaceable and doesn’t use a proprietary clasp, so it’s easy enough to find more appropriate alternatives.
Battery life also impressed me, though your mileage may vary. Frequently checking GPS or using the real-time tracking feature will drain its life quickly, and if your child uses the camera a lot, that’ll definitely have an impact. Verizon promises about a day and a half of actual usage and three days of standby time, and I’d say that’s a little ambitious, but not by a huge amount. We usually ended a day with about 50% of battery left, but sometimes as much as 90% if it stayed in her backpack all day and I only checked the GPS when she was about to leave school.
What we didn’t like about it
It can be buggy
This is where things aren’t surprising: the Verizon GizmoWatch Disney Edition is buggy at times. At least once a week, GPS simply won’t work and I can’t check its location. I also found that location-based notifications are just plain busted. They might work, they might not, but there’s no consistency that I’ve noticed, so I’ve come to view them as a nice little treat from time to time.
The scheduled school mode option can be unreliable, too. I suspect the action is initiated by the app, and my daughter’s school is ancient, with thick, brick walls, so it may just be that it only tries to initiate the change a handful of times before it gives up. I quickly got in the habit of verifying school mode was on after she got to school as a result, and toggling it on if it wasn’t.
The magnetic charger is nice to have, but the magnet is terrible
Like the Apple Watch, the GizmoWatch uses a magnetic charging puck, rather than a plug-in connector, but it’s not wireless, and this introduces some problems. First, the magnet is just weak, and it’s far too easy to nudge the watch off the puck. Second, it seems to have problems maintaining its connection even without being bumped, so it will periodically issue a chime when it stops charging and another when it begins again, though there are times when it just doesn’t begin again, even if it’s apparently well-seated. I like the convenience of just slapping the GizmoWatch on its charger, but if given the choice between its current implementation and a USB-C port, I’d definitely take the latter.
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If the watch breaks, you may be out of luck
I don’t know what the sales numbers of the GizmoWatch are like, but it’s definitely nowhere near the ubiquity of wearables from the biggest tech companies. That means there’s really no third party market for screen repair, and Verizon itself doesn’t offer that service, so if your watch breaks and you didn’t buy the unpleasantly-steep $14/month Verizon Mobile Protect plan (with an additional $29 charge for covered repairs). In other words, if you own the watch for just over a year, you’ll have paid the entire replacement cost for the watch, so it’s just a raw deal either way. So yeah, buy a case for it.
Verizon-only service with some serious data privacy catches
Since the GizmoWatch Disney Edition is a Verizon product, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that it only works on the company’s own network. That’s a shame if you like it but live in a poorly-covered area or you just don’t like the company’s service, because it’s legitimately a nice product.
Beyond that, it’s good to fully understand the data privacy aspect of the GizmoWatch. Admittedly, if you’re buying a GPS tracker for your kid, you’ve already made peace with some amount of privacy sacrifice, but Verizon records details about nearly everything you do with the watch, at least temporarily. I don’t just mean the long list of emojis your kid sent you. The company sucks up any info you enter about your child’s name, age, photo and even their relationship with you. Text messages, video calls, audio recordings, pictures, and any contact information you add — all of that is sent to the company, and some unspecified amount of that personal information is shared with its vendors. At the very least, Verizon says it doesn’t sell this information to advertisers or otherwise use it for marketing purposes, which is far from a guarantee with this sort of product or service.
Still, that’s a lot of data collection, and your consent, which you can revoke by emailing the company, is required to use the GizmoHub app, meaning you’ll lose most of the benefits the watch otherwise confers if you don’t give it. Curious, I contacted Verizon to ask more about why the data is needed, and was told it’s stored on the company’s servers for a limited time for retrieval with the GizmoHub app, which sounds reasonable, but I’d be more comfortable if the data was stored exclusively on my smartphone.
I also asked about how the data is handled in transit — I’d guess the GizmoWatch isn’t powerful enough to encrypt data before it leaves the watch in any reasonable amount of time, but it would be nice if it’s at least stored and retransmitted in an encrypted state. Those questions were forwarded to another department to answer, but weren’t available by press time.
Taken on its own, it’s understandable if you’re leery about all of that. However, I should note that Verizon appears to take in only the information you provide, and there’s nothing stopping you from not including a picture of your kid, their real name, or any other identifying information, and you can also disable video calling.
For more info, Verizon’s Gizmo policy is available on its own, separate from any other privacy statements.
How it compares
Verizon GizmoWatch Apple Watch SE w/Cellular Gabb Watch 2 GizmoWatch 3 Price $200 $300 $150 $150 Cellular provider Verizon All major US providers supported Gabb Wireless Verizon Connectivity LTE LTE, WiFi, Bluetooth LTE LTE, WiFi Storage 8GB 32GB Not listed 8GB Screen size 36mm 40-44mm 36mm Dimensions - 1.57 x 1.34 x 0.42 inches (40mm watch)
- 1.73 x 1.50 x 0.42 inches (44mm watch) 1.81 x 1.65 x .58 inches Display type AMOLED AMOLED LCD AMOLED Battery life Up to 3 days (standby)
Up to 1.5 days (usage) Up to 18 hours, 245mAh battery Not given, 500mAh battery Up to 3.6 days, 510mAh battery GPS Yes Yes Yes Yes Camera Yes No No No Compatibility Android, iOS iOS Android, iOS Android, iOS
Bottom line
The Verizon GizmoWatch Disney Edition is, despite its most obvious flaws, a great smartwatch for most kids, if you want a highly-controllable GPS watch that doesn’t try to distract your child while in school. It’s an aging watch at this point, with Verizon having recently released the $50 cheaper GizmoWatch 3, but with all its fun Disney themes and simplistic approach, it’s still a fine choice for younger kids who you may not want to buy a more complicated device for.
That said, it comes with an aggressive data collection policy that could give even the most modestly privacy-conscious parents pause, especially where small children are concerned (it makes no exceptions for kids under 13). While there are easy ways to control how much crucial identifiable information you give up about your child, it takes a certain level of awareness to take those steps. At the very least, Verizon seems to have taken care to give parents those options, and says it doesn’t sell the info to third parties — and those are commendable things! — I just wish it was more upfront about it.
Source: CNN Underscored