Woman wearing modern smartwatch with circular face and minimalist interface showing natural light and blurred beach stones

Pebble Resurrects with Button-Powered Round 2 Watch

At a Glance

  • The $200 Pebble Round 2 revives physical buttons on a 2026 smartwatch
  • It offers two-week battery life but drops heart rate tracking and speakers
  • The companion Index 01 ring records voice memos for 2-3 years before dying
  • Why it matters: Core Devices bets simplicity beats AI overload for wrist tech

Pebble is back. Founder Eric Migicovsky unveiled the $200 Pebble Round 2 at CES 2026, crowned best smartwatch of the show by News Of Fort Worth. The circular wearable revives four physical buttons and promises two weeks of battery life, deliberately skipping modern staples like heart-rate sensors and speakers.

The Round 2: Buttons Over Touch

The stainless-steel watch ships in May in two sizes:

  • Large: 20 mm band, silver or black frame
  • Small: 14 mm band, rose gold or silver frame

A 1.3-inch, 260 × 260 pixel screen dominates the face-larger than the 2015 Pebble Time Round yet smaller than Google’s latest Pixel Watch 4. Migicovsky told News Of Fort Worth the old model’s “large bezel” had to go; the new display feels “Goldilocks” on the wrist.

Battery life lands at 14 days, half the 30-day estimate for the upcoming Pebble Time 2. You lose voice replies and fitness-depth metrics, but gain instant tactile control without swiping glass.

Index 01: A Ring That Records-Then Dies

Core Devices’ most divisive gadget is the Index 01, a $75 preorder ring that climbs to $100 after March launch. One button starts a voice memo; onboard storage holds “a couple minutes” per clip. Bluetooth off-loads recordings to a phone app that labels them as notes, reminders, or alarms.

The catch: no rechargeable cell. A non-replaceable battery lasts two to three years, then the ring becomes e-waste. Migicovsky frames it as a trade-off for the low price and simplicity, arguing that a rechargeable version “would be more expensive.”

Simplicity Versus the AI Tide

Both products ignore the industry sprint toward AI overload. The Round 2 runs no voice assistant; the Index 01 records but does not transcribe on-device. Migicovsky calls the approach a tool that “doesn’t take itself too seriously,” pitching the ring as an ever-present “external memory” for quick thoughts while biking or walking.

Cameron R. Hayes pressed him on consumer resistance to disposable hardware. The founder remained skeptical of the criticism, noting users who want longevity can “just get a Whoop or an Oura ring-there are tons of different options.”

Launch Timeline

Product Ship Date Preorder Price Regular Price
Index 01 March $75 $100
Pebble Time 2 April TBA TBA
Pebble Round 2 May TBA $200
Stainless steel watch with raised body and dual buttons showing premium metal finish with engraved details

Migicovsky’s Core Devices, formed in 2025, keeps the playful spirit that once made Pebble a Kickstarter darling. The Round 2’s tactile buttons and the Index 01’s single-purpose recording thumb-switch both signal a bet that some consumers want less from their wearables, not more.

Key Takeaways

  • Pebble Round 2 revives four-button navigation and two-week battery life for $200
  • The watch skips heart-rate tracking and speakers, targeting simplicity over specs
  • Index 01 ring records voice memos for 2-3 years, then becomes unusable
  • Both devices prioritize straightforward function amid 2026’s AI-saturated market

Author

  • Cameron found his way into journalism through an unlikely route—a summer internship at a small AM radio station in Abilene, where he was supposed to be running the audio board but kept pitching story ideas until they finally let him report. That was 2013, and he hasn't stopped asking questions since.

    Cameron covers business and economic development for newsoffortworth.com, reporting on growth, incentives, and the deals reshaping Fort Worth. A UNT journalism and economics graduate, he’s known for investigative business reporting that explains how city hall decisions affect jobs, rent, and daily life.

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