I tested Zepp OS 6 Motion UI on the Amazfit Balance 3
Zepp OS 6 brings Motion UI, the new look for Amazfit watches, and I have been trying it out on the Amazfit Balance 3. It changes the way you get around the watch but the main thing is it still feels easy to figure out rather than a total overhaul.
Easy to adjust to
The first thing I noticed is the new interface does not take long to pick up. Anyone coming from a recent Amazfit watch should get the hang of it fast, because the basic logic still feels familiar.
That is a good thing, because a sports watch interface can go wrong fast if a redesign tries too hard to look differnet. Zepp OS 6 dodges that trap. It changes the layout but it does not make you relearn the watch from scratch.
After a short time with the Amazfit Balance 3, the new system felt natural enough. I was not stopping to think about where everything had gone, which is usually a decent sign with this kind of update.
The main swipes have changed
The biggest change is what happens from the watch face. Swipe left now and you get a list of exercise shortcuts, swipe right and you get the full app list.
That is different from the old setup. Before, swiping left took you to customisable shortcut cards, while swiping right scrolled through individual widgets like BioCharge, movement, heart rate and other daily stats.
Those screens have not gone anywhere. They now live as cards, which you reach by swiping up from the watch face. Tap a card and it opens up that widget. So in a sense, that does require extra effort to reach.
This is probably the biggest adjustment of the lot. Zepp Health has pulled the daily health and activity panels out of the left and right swipe flow and tucked them into a card stack instead. In theory that gives the interface a cleaner structure, with workouts on one side, apps on the other and glanceable cards sitting above.
The settings page feels familiar
The area that seems to have changed the least is the settings page. A swipe down from the watch face still gets you to the quick settings, so the core behaviour stays familiar.
The main difference that I’ve noticed is that notifications now sit on the same page, below the settings options. Before, notifications had their own separate swipe position. In Zepp OS 6 it feels more folded into the control area.
I am not sure that is obviously better or worse. It is just different, and it might make the interface feel more compact, but I would not call it a major improvement day to day.
Better structure, but not a dramatic upgrade
So what’s the takeaway?
I would be careful not to oversell Motion UI. Zepp OS 6 does change the way the watch is organised, but after using it on the Balance 3, I do not see a huge difference in everyday use. The interface feels intuitive and familiar, and that works in its favour. But it does not suddenly make the watch feel like a completely different device.
I suppose there is a case for saying the new design is more logical. Exercise shortcuts on the left and apps on the right make sense, while moving BioCharge, movement, heart rate and similar panels into cards gives them a more consistent home.
There is also a case for saying this is mostly a rearrangement. If you used the old interface comfortably, Zepp OS 6 does not feel like a huge leap forward. It feels more like Zepp Health has tidied the furniture, rather than rebuilt the room.
For now, watches that have fully moved to the new system include the Balance 3 and Balance Ultra, along with the Cheetah 2 Ultra and Bip Max. Several more devices are due to receive Zepp OS 6 over the next month, including the recent T-Rex models, Balance 2, Cheetah 2 Pro and Active 3 Premium.
Outside reaction to Motion UI has been mixed, which lines up with my own experience. Some users like the cleaner vertical card system, while others miss the old widget-style navigation and the extra choice it gave them. After using it on the Balance 3, I sit somewhere in the middle. Zepp OS 6 is easy to learn, but I am not convinced it changes daily use as much as the Motion UI branding suggests.
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