As much as I like Wear OS, I have to admit the platform has always had one weakness: watch faces. The Galaxy Watch and Pixel Watch have nice built-in options, but venture into the Play Store to look for more, and it’s not easy to find good ones. Allow me to make some suggestions.
For a long time, third-party Wear OS watch faces were genuinely not great, but it was for technical reasons. Back in 2023, Google released a format for designers that allowed third-party watch faces to behave like native faces. It became mandatory this year to use this more optimized format, so you can feel good about using third-party watch faces.
Digalog
The best of both worlds
My personal favorite watch face is called Digalog, and if you’re good with portmanteaus, you may have guessed what it does. I’ve always had a hard time choosing between analog and digital watch faces. Analog faces almost always look nicer, but I can’t pretend digital isn’t easier to read.
Digalog combines the analog and digital into a single watch face. At first glance, it looks like a normal analog watch with dashes and hands. However, at the end of the hour and minute hands are digital numbers labeling their position on the clock. If that isn’t cool enough, you also get three slots for complications.
Mono
Minimal in style, not information
The most recent watch face I’ve downloaded is called Mono. This one balances minimal style while offering a lot of customization choices. You can get a nice, dense spread of information without it feeling messy and crowded. You get 11 clock designs, 50+ colors, and four slots for complications.
Nothing Fancy
Highly informative
As alluded to with the previous watch face, it can be challenging to find designs that offer tons of information and still look good. Nothing Fancy does that better than most. You get a whopping eight slots for complications, multiple dial styles, and accent color choices. Don’t let the name fool you—this is a pretty fancy watch face.
Radii
A timeless classic Wear OS watch face
Wear OS originally launched as “Android Wear” way back in 2014. A year later, a watch face called Radii appeared in the Play Store. It’s been consistently updated ever since, and it’s still one of the nicest, minimal watch faces you can find. The hour is shown at the center, and it’s orbited by the minutes. Today’s date is show on the left, and battery life is represented with a strip along the right edge. You can choose the color, but not much else. And that’s okay.
Tidal Glow
Pixel Watch inspired
One of the most common watch face inspirations is Google’s Pixel Watch. Tidal Glow does this, too, but it does it better than many others. The “glow” part of the name comes from an ambient glow effect that matches the accent color of your choosing. In addition, it shows the date and has four complication slots—one being for more detail. It’s clean and informative, just like a Pixel Watch.
Typograph
Fun with fonts
I must admit I’m a sucker for a good font. If you’re a fellow typophile, you’ll appreciate the Typograph watch face. It offers 16 font styles and 400 color combinations to choose from. You can make it as plain or informative as you want with three optional complication slots. Empty slots allow for more of the big, bold fonts to shine. It’s a very eye-catching watch face.
Well-made watch faces aren’t free
As you may have noticed, most of the watch faces on this list are not free. That’s something I’ve come to accept with all the time I’ve spent searching the Play Store for not ugly watch faces. I don’t often pay for mobile apps, but if it’s something that lives on my wrist for all the world to see, I’m okay handing over a couple of dollars. Thankfully, you won’t find any subscriptions with these watch faces. Pay once and enjoy them forever.
These are the 5 settings I change on every Galaxy Watch
My favorite thing about Samsung Galaxy Watches is the many options and customization features. It’s a stark contrast to the Pixel Watch. However, that does mean it takes a bit of effort to get everything working just right. Here’s where I start.


