
This review is not sponsored (nor does any company get to preview anything I review), and I don’t take any advertiser money from any companies I review. All of it in an effort to find out where this watch works well, and where its caveats are.Īs usual, this watch is a media loaner, and it’ll go back to Garmin shortly. Everything from high mountain hiking to ocean swimming, snow-covered escapes, and city testing. I’ve been using the Epix now for quite some time, putting it through both daily 24×7 usage as well as workouts and other athletic adventures. In other words, for most people, you’re not sacrificing much for a dramatically better display. But the key thing to know is that even though it has an AMOLED display, it still manages 6 days in always-on display mode – which reaches upwards of 16 days in gesture mode. There are, of course, differences in battery life too, which we’ll get into. That’s mainly because solar frankly wouldn’t do much here for this display, and the flashlight isn’t quite in the Epix cards for the time being. For example, the Epix includes the aforementioned higher resolution and more vivid AMOLED display, but it lacks solar panels or the Fenix 7X flashlight. If you haven’t seen my also-just-released Fenix 7 In-Depth Review, the key thing to know here is that Epix contains every software feature of the Fenix 7, but differs at the hardware level.

In order to save digital typing waste, I’m just going to call it the shortened Epix as well. Now, Garmin officially calls it just ‘Epix’, though you’ll see the 2nd gen bits here and there. No, this isn’t your grandfather’s Epix from 2015, but rather, this is Garmin’s new 2nd gen Epix that effectively takes an Epix and elevates it with a full AMOLED color touchscreen display.
