They also bring maps, music and payments.
Garmin is no stranger to catering to fans of specific sports with its GPS watches. Its latest wristwear, however, takes that devotion to another level. It’s upgrading its Fenix 5 outdoor watches with the Fenix 5 Plus series, whose star attraction is a new Pulse Ox Acclimation sensor that gauges your blood oxygen saturation levels when you’re climbing at high altitudes. If you’re not coping well with an arduous mountain ascent, your watch will let you know it’s time to take it easy.
Don’t worry if you’re not scaling K2 any time soon — there are some universal upgrades as well. The Plus models pack the music, payments and maps you’d expect from Garmin’s latest watches. That’s more than a little handy for features like a round-trip creator that automatically generates routes for your next run or bike ride. They also include Galileo tracking to find your location when GPS alone might fail, and the more compact Fenix 5S Plus (shown at left) stuffs in a larger 1.2-inch screen while still remaining suitable for slimmer wrists.
Your choices mostly come down to battery life and case size. The sleeker 5S Plus lasts a week in smartwatch mode, or four hours in GPS and music mode. Step up to the slightly bulkier 5 Plus and you’ll get 10 days of smartwatch use and 8 hours of GPS/music, while the chunky 5X Plus lasts for 20 days as a smartwatch and 13 hours with GPS/music.
Be prepared to pay a premium for this do-everything design, though. The Fenix 5 Plus range is even more expensive than the original with prices ranging from $700 to an eye-watering $1,150. You’re getting one because you absolutely depend on accurate fitness tracking — the smartwatch features are just a bonus.
This article originally appeared on Engadget.