Fitness-focused bone conduction headphones with 32GB built-in storage and IP68 rating
MOJAWA Run Plus: Bone conduction with 32GB storage for athletes who want both MP3 and Bluetooth
At $100, the MOJAWA Run Plus combines two features rarely found together in bone conduction headphones: Bluetooth connectivity for regular wireless use, and 32GB of built-in MP3 storage for swimming and situations where Bluetooth isn't practical. IP68 waterproofing covers full submersion. For athletes who want one device across pool and track, the combination is functional.
What works
32GB built-in storage is substantially more than competing MP3 bone conduction options — the Shokz OpenSwim provides 4GB, the MOJAWA Run Plus provides 8x that. For athletes with large music libraries, lossless audio files, or podcasts stored locally, the storage headroom is meaningful.
IP68 full submersion rating enables swimming use alongside regular Bluetooth operation. The dual-mode functionality — Bluetooth for runs, MP3 for swims — in a single device avoids managing two separate headphones for different workouts.
10-hour battery handles long training sessions. At approximately 35 grams, the Run Plus is slightly heavier than the Shokz OpenRun (26 grams) — a noticeable difference only on longer workouts, but worth factoring in for marathon-distance athletes. Bass response is improved over typical bone conduction, which usually struggles with low frequencies, through MOJAWA's enhanced transducer design.
What doesn't
MOJAWA is a newer brand without Shokz's category track record. Long-term reliability, customer service experience, and firmware support are less established than the dominant brand's equivalent products.
At $100, the MOJAWA Run Plus is priced alongside the Shokz OpenRun ($130) and above the Vidonn F1 ($40) and Tayogo ($40). The premium over budget alternatives is justified by the IP68 + storage combination, but requires confidence in a less-established brand.
The "heavier than Shokz equivalents" note in product data is meaningful for comfort during long workouts — weight matters more than specs suggest in extended use.
Who should buy this
The cross-training athlete who wants a single bone conduction device that handles both pool and road workouts without the 4GB limitation of the Shokz OpenSwim, and is comfortable with a newer brand.
Who should look elsewhere
Established brand reliability: Shokz OpenRun ($130) for Bluetooth, Shokz OpenSwim ($150) for swimming. Budget entry: Vidonn F1 ($40) or Tayogo ($40). True wireless: Shokz OpenFit ($160).