Each theme has separate “sleepy sounds,” ambient music you can activate by getting into bed at bedtime. (Yes, you will need to tell Alarmo when your bedtime is.) While this is easily my favorite feature, there’s no way to set how long sleepy sounds play. Like it or not, you get 10 minutes, and then it’s lights out. As a troubled sleeper who relies on white noise or ambient music to drown out the world, I want those sounds to play all night long. Alarmo does not.
Wake-Up Artist
Alarmo looks like a chubby toy next to modern alarm clocks, but it has a comical, almost militant approach to waking you up. Warning screens flash across the screen when you fail to get up in time. Once you are out of bed, it scans the area to make sure you’re really up.
Oh, did you want to hop back under the covers for a little bit? Not on Alarmo’s watch. Crawl back in before an hour has passed, and the process begins again. And while it’s genuinely hilarious to make an alarm clock that refuses to let you get back into bed, a partner whose body gets lumped in with yours by the clock’s sensor might not feel similarly if you forget to deactivate the alarm. It doesn’t matter if only one of you is left; Alarmo does not discriminate.
There are ways to override the morning scuffle if you want to skip the whole fanfare. Successfully getting out of bed without having to hit that metaphorical eject congratulates you with a flash of rainbow colors. Slapping the clock’s big top button makes everything stop.
How you want to handle the alarm is up to how much external validation you’re craving that morning. Personally, I need applause to live, so, after much back and forth, I typically would get out of bed the way the clock wanted me to.
Child Time
While Alarmo has some features I truly love, it’s restrictive in how I use them. You can’t set multiple alarms throughout the day, only create a completely new one. The clock will not allow you to mix and match; you can’t listen to Splatoon’s lo-fi ambiance sleepy sounds, for example, then wake up to Zelda telling you to open your eyes.
Over the week I’ve used the clock, I’ve found myself repeatedly thinking that it’s a perfect gift for a kid: goofy, interactive, musical, and with features that reward you for successfully meeting your bedtime or getting up in the morning right away. It’s a handheld version of my mom waking me up in fifth grade and hustling me out the door.