On a powder day in January, I went snowboarding to test the Suunto Spartan Sport Wrist HR Baro. My friend noticed that I was checking the time on my phone in the lift line. “Aren’t you supposed to be testing a watch?” she said.
“It’s too much trouble,” I said. “It’s easier to just get my phone out of my jacket.”
“That better make it into the review,” she said.
So, there it is.
It's hard to write that because I liked the watch so much. The Suunto Spartan HR Baro is so baller. It has a gleaming steel bezel with a gorgeous, mineral glass touchscreen display that tracks the motions of over eighty different sports, and offers stats and training suggestions on each. It looks and feels exactly like the sophisticated, high-tech mini computer that it is.
But after a few weeks of wearing it while hiking, running, climbing, snowboarding, swimming, doing yoga, and sleeping, I found myself using it less and less. It’s just too big, and its companion app is too frustrating.
The Spartan HR Baro is the latest version of the Suunto Spartan HR, but with a barometer (duh). The barometric altimeter is a much more accurate tool with which to measure elevation changes, a function at which GPS trackers have been notoriously awful.
It took two hours for the watch to charge completely. The battery lasted for several days of regular hour-long hikes or workouts, but it could vary tremendously depending on the activity. Five hours’ worth of snowboarding ran down the battery to 25 percent in one day.
You do have to set your reference altitude, as barometers fall when low-pressure systems are coming in, which is all the time in places like Portland, Oregon. Suunto does suggest checking your reference points frequently. An accurate altimeter is a particularly nice thing to have if you are a mountain person versus an ocean person. You need to track your elevation changes a lot more while climbing and skiing than you do with open water swimming.
But the real draw of the Suunto sportwatches is the Suunto Movescount platform. You can track a dizzying array of sports, and more are coming online all the time. I met Suunto digital director Heikki Norta at CES 2018, who remarked that it's a priority to develop custom "moves" for every different sport. Eighty sports are currently available on the watch, with more customizable on the Movescount app.

