Noise has launched the NoiseFit Halo 3 in India, and the pitch is familiar: a classic round watch face, a bright AMOLED panel, and enough AI-flavored extras to make a budget smartwatch sound more ambitious than it has any right to be. The price is set at $55, which puts it squarely in the ”cheap enough to try” category rather than the ”buy it once and forget it” tier.
The headline feature of the NoiseFit Halo 3 is the 1.43-inch AMOLED display, which tops out at 1,000 nits. That should help outdoors, where many low-cost watches become tiny mirrors with optimism issues.
Noise AI Pro and smart notifications
NoiseFit Halo 3 runs on Noise AI Pro, a platform that accepts voice commands, records voice notes, and turns them into text automatically. It can also generate personalized wallpapers and produce morning briefings covering sleep, activity, and health data.
Android users also get ”smart notifications” for verification codes, delivery updates, and ride details. That is the kind of practical feature set that tends to matter more than another generic workout screen, especially in a watch aimed at value buyers.
Noise Vault stores QR tickets on the wrist
The oddball but useful feature here is Noise Vault, which stores QR codes for tickets directly on the watch. Noise says that covers everything from airline boarding passes to concert entry, cutting down the usual phone-digging routine at gates and turnstiles.
- Round-cased smartwatch
- 1.43-inch AMOLED display
- Up to 1,000 nits brightness
- Noise AI Pro voice features and transcription
- QR ticket storage with Noise Vault
- Heart rate, stress, SpO2, and 24/7 activity tracking
- Water resistance up to 10 meters
- Up to 7 days of battery life
Battery life and health tracking
On the health side, the watch tracks heart rate, stress, SpO2, and activity around the clock. It is also rated for water resistance up to 10 meters and is claimed to last up to 7 days on a charge.
That battery claim is the one to watch. In this price bracket, brands often trade real-world endurance for feature lists, so if Noise can stay anywhere near a week with AMOLED and voice tools enabled, the Halo 3 could look sharper than rivals from Xiaomi and Realme that keep crowding this segment.
A budget smartwatch with a slightly weird personality
The Halo 3 is not trying to be a minimalist fitness band, and that is refreshing. It is trying to be a wrist-sized shortcut for notifications, tickets, notes, and daily health checks, which makes it sound less like a sports device and more like a small commuter gadget with ambitions.
The open question is whether buyers want AI helpers on a $55 watch, or just a screen that is bright, readable, and doesn’t die by Friday. Noise is betting it can have both.

