Smart bracelets are shrinking and Rogbid wants in. The new Rogbid Vogue bracelet arrives as a fashion-first wearable that keeps things simple under the hood but sharp on the wrist.
Rogbid Vogue bracelet aims for wrist appeal

At just 2.8 mm thick, Rogbid is calling this the world’s thinnest health smart bracelet. And whether that’s precise or not, the stainless steel body looks the part. The Vogue skips over bold fitness features in favor of polished hardware and a jewelry-like feel. Think less gym tracker, more daily wristwear with perks.
Color options include Radiant Gold, Lunar Silver, and Chrome Shadow. Buyers also get a bonus pair of Bluetooth earphones, an extra silicone strap, and a holiday card all baked into the $59.99 price.
Display stays minimal on the Rogbid Vogue bracelet
The bracelet includes a slim, built-in screen for basic alerts and the time. It’s made for glances, not tapping. If you’re coming from wider bands like the Xiaomi Smart Band series, you might find the display a bit too narrow. Still, it does what it needs to: show calls, messages, and notifications quickly without crowding the design.
Health tracking covers the basics
Don’t expect lab-level stats here, but the Vogue handles the usual suspects:
- Heart rate tracking
- Blood oxygen monitoring
- Sleep stage detection
- Women’s health logging
- Sports modes via the companion app
It runs on the OM6626B chip, with Bluetooth 5.3 onboard. Compatible with Android 6.0+ and iOS 10.0+, it promises 5 to 7 days of typical battery life and up to 30 days on standby.
Rogbid Vogue bracelet is for style-first users
This isn’t built to take down Garmin or Fitbit. It’s a metal bracelet with just enough smarts to keep your phone in your pocket. At 41.2 grams with a steel strap, it’s no featherweight but it makes a statement.
Water resistance is rated at 10 ATM, so it’s safe for splashes and quick dips. Still, the real focus is clear: a sleek look with modest digital features.
Not built for athletes, but it doesn’t try to be
Rogbid isn’t pretending this bracelet replaces a smartwatch. Instead, it goes after users who care more about matching metal than counting macros. It’s thin, clean, and cheap and that might be all it needs.
The shine’s the thing here.

