Smartwatch ecosystems live and die by the apps available on the device, and Amazfit just gave its wearables a small but meaningful boost: seven new third-party Mini-apps and games that run directly on the watch. For international users who prize compact, on-device functionality-quick utilities, diagnostics and bite-sized entertainment-this matters because it shows Amazfit is courting independent developers and expanding what its watches can do without relying on a paired phone. The additions are also practical: list management that imports from common formats, an audio test tone generator for diagnostics, and an interactive alarm that forces you to act to stop it. And for the casual player there are two lightweight arcade titles. The update reinforces that budget-friendly wearable platforms can still offer a vibrant, phone-free experience: useful tools for troubleshooting and daily routines, plus a dash of fun, all delivered through the Mini App Store inside Zepp Health, globally available.
What’s new
Seven new Mini-apps created by third-party developers are now available for Amazfit smartwatches. They can be installed and run directly on Amazfit devices, including the recently presented Amazfit T-Rex Ultra 2.
Utilities and productivity
One of the highlights is wrist-list, a list manager that supports importing data from Google Keep, CSV and Markdown formats – handy for keeping checklists on your wrist without reaching for your phone. Sound Generator produces pure sine signals; you can use it to test audio equipment or, as the developer points out, to help remove water from a watch speaker. AlarmZone is an interactive alarm that won’t just be turned off by a tap: to dismiss it you must either shake the watch or solve a math problem, which helps avoid accidental snoozes.
Games
Two new games have also arrived. Block Breaker is a take on the classic brick‑breaking arcade game with 40 levels and controls that work via the watch crown or buttons. Mr. Roundy is a platformer with 12 levels where the character jumps when you tap the screen. The new Mini-app list also includes Rain Runner and Squash Scoring.
How to get them
You can download all seven new Mini-apps from the Mini App Store inside the Zepp Health app.
Context for readers outside Russia
In Russia, Amazfit and the Zepp Health app are common distribution points for community and third-party watch software, so users there are used to finding mini-apps through the Mini App Store and local communities. International readers should know a ”Mini-app” in this ecosystem means a lightweight application that runs on the watch itself, minimizing phone dependence – a model similar to other wearable platforms that offer on-device apps for quick tasks and short interactions.
Analysis
This small bundle of releases is notable less for headline‑grabbing features than for what it signals about Amazfit’s ecosystem: third-party developers are active, and the platform is getting practical, on-device tools that improve day-to-day use of the watches. Utilities like wrist-list and Sound Generator show the value of running standalone apps for productivity and diagnostics, while AlarmZone addresses a common pain point with alarms. The two games are a reminder that simple, low-friction entertainment still has a place on a wrist‑worn device. For users, it’s a meaningful quality-of-life upgrade; for Amazfit, it’s incremental evidence that expanding the Mini App Store could boost device appeal versus rivals that rely more heavily on phone-tethered experiences. Expect more niche but useful apps to follow if the developer community keeps growing.

