Tactility is important to me. I don't like cars that go all-in on touchscreen interfaces—I want buttons! I use a Keychron mechanical keyboard to get that clickety-clack experience when I type, and I love using the little knob to control my PC's volume. This is partly why I really like using Samsung’s new Galaxy Watch6 Classic.
Most smartwatches have you swipe on the tiny screen to move around the operating system, but the new Watch6 Classic brings back the famed mechanical rotating bezel you can twist to scroll through the various tiles and apps. Tick-tick-tick-tick. It feels like spinning the combination lock for your high school locker. Samsung removed this feature on last year's Galaxy Watch5 series, but it's back. It makes using the watch fun.
I tested the Galaxy Watch6 Classic, and I've had a pleasant experience with it overall. Its 47-mm size is large but comfy on my wrist, with a minimal gap under the lugs. There are actually four Galaxy Watch6 models, and I appreciate this because they all have varying prices and, more importantly, sizes. I am a 6'4" man, and my wrists and palms are huge—they're better suited to the larger models. The Galaxy Watch6 has 40- or 44-mm case size options, and then there's the Galaxy Watch6 Classic, which lets you choose between 43- and 47-mm cases.
The standard Watch6 and Watch6 Classic differ in two ways outside of screen sizes and battery life. The latter is made of more durable stainless steel, whereas the Watch6 sticks with aluminum. The Classic also gets the fun rotating mechanical bezel that I love, but the basic Watch6 uses a touch bezel, which Samsung used on last year's models. I really dislike the touch bezel—mechanical all the way! These models are priced from $300 for the smallest Watch6 all the way up to $430 for the largest Classic, but you can also opt for the LTE model, which ticks the price up.
Everything else is more or less the same, from the 5-ATM and IP68 water resistance to built-in GPS support. Samsung has integrated a little button into the 20-mm straps you can push to release them from the case if you want to swap them out, but I found that it really requires some force. I wish these buttons were a smidge bigger. I swapped the silicone band out for the much nicer fabric band, but the straps aren't proprietary. You can still use any 20-mm straps you want.
Smartwatches are passive devices that I mostly interact with when they pester me. I've used the Watch6 Classic to respond to messages, delete notifications, and take the occasional call when my hands are full of grocery bags. (I used my chin to rotate the mechanical bezel to the right to accept the call!)