Artificial intelligence wants to be everywhere, including on your wrists and in your workouts. Compared to generative AI “slop” like photo and video creation, there’s a case to be made for AI infiltrating your workout and fitness plans. Not everyone has access to a personal trainer, sports physician, or physical therapist easily — in fact, few do — and that’s why an accurate and accessible AI feature could fill the gap.

Of course, that puts a lot of pressure on a piece of tech known to be fallible. Anytime your health is involved, you need to be careful what devices and features you trust. Whether we like it or not, AI is coming for the health space — Garmin, Strava, Apple, Samsung, Google, and many other brands are rolling out AI-powered features now.

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Samsung’s Running Coach, a similar feature that includes a brief questionnaire to get a picture of your capabilities. There looks to be more AI processing going on here with Suunto Coach. It takes more time to create a training plan and offers more variety than Running Coach, which is more rigid with fixed time and distance-based running levels.

That’s what intrigues me about Suunto Coach and the AI-generated training plans, which are called “My plan” and are still in beta. For better or worse, they’re really using AI. Meanwhile, AI isn’t making a meaningful impact on Running Coach or Apple’s Workout Buddy. The latter essentially just recites live stats you’re already used to seeing on your Apple Watch.