Ugreen has launched a soccer ball-shaped Bluetooth tracker, the FineTrack 2, as the centerpiece of a three-product “Game Day Kit” timed to the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The FineTrack 2 sells for $19.99 in the United States, the FineTrack Mini 2 ships as a $45.99 four-pack, and the Nexode Power Bank 10000mAh 55W carries a $54.99 sticker. All three are available now through Amazon and Ugreen’s official store, and a Ugreen booth ran at the FIFA Fan Festival in Los Angeles from June 11 to 14, 2026.
The tournament runs from June 11 to July 19, 2026, across 16 host cities in the United States, Canada and Mexico, with 48 teams playing 104 matches. Ugreen, the Shenzhen-based consumer electronics group founded in 2012, has built the kit’s pitch around two specific numbers: a tracker priced below Apple’s $29 AirTag, and a sealed battery rated to last up to 5 to 7 years.
Three Pieces Built Around a Tournament Trip
The Game Day Kit pulls the FineTrack 2, the FineTrack Mini 2 four-pack and the 10000mAh Nexode power bank into what Ugreen calls “an integrated everyday carry system” for “attending sports events, travel, and daily commutes,” per the company’s Game Day Kit launch announcement. The three are sold separately and also as a bundle through Amazon and the Ugreen Official Store. Ugreen’s pitch to tournament travelers is the same one it makes to any high-mobility iPhone user, and per the launch announcement the three pieces are sold as a bundle or as standalone upgrades.
Ugreen, founded in 2012 and now selling in more than 180 countries, has been pushing deeper into the U.S. consumer-electronics aisle for several product cycles. The Game Day Kit is the brand’s most direct pitch yet at iPhone-owning travelers, and the FIFA Fan Festival booth was its first public showcase timed to a global tournament.
The FineTrack 2 Packs a 5-to-7-Year Battery Into a Sphere
The FineTrack 2 is the kit’s headline piece. It is a sphere roughly 1.34 inches (34 mm) in diameter and about 0.8 ounces (24 grams), shaped like a miniature soccer ball with two fluorescent stripes that glow in the dark and a small white light that flashes when the tracker is pinging. Ugreen rates the device to IP68 for dust and water resistance, and ships it with a replaceable lanyard for clipping onto luggage, a backpack or a set of keys.
Inside the ball sits a sealed, non-replaceable battery rated for 5 to 7 years of everyday tracking, well past the roughly year-long cycle of Apple’s user-replaceable CR2032 coin cell. The FineTrack 2 plays a 110dB alert when triggered from the Find My app, and supports Apple’s Lost Mode and item-sharing features, per Ugreen’s launch announcement.
The pitch is the same one Ugreen has been making to its existing FineTrack line, but the shape is new. The soccer-ball silhouette is a clear fit for the World Cup and a deliberate break from the flat tile design that has defined Bluetooth trackers since Tile popularized the category.
“the FineTrack 2 is quite small, even tiny, it’s comparatively bulky for a tracker due to the sphere shape. But that might just be the point: looking unlike any tracker, it can hide in plain sight.”
Dong Knows Tech, in a hands-on review of the FineTrack 2.
What $19.99 Buys Against Apple’s $29 AirTag 2
Apple’s AirTag 2 launched in January 2026 at $29 for a single unit, and Apple still sells a single AirTag for $29 on its product page, with a “50% louder speaker” than the original, per Apple’s January 2026 AirTag 2 launch. The FineTrack 2 undercuts that price and offers a louder spec-sheet alarm at 110dB, a sealed battery rated at up to 5 to 7 years, and a hardware shape no AirTag can match. Where the two products most clearly differ is on the battery.
Ugreen’s FineTrack 2 also takes the AirTag’s user-replaceable battery, a CR2032 coin cell that Apple says lasts about a year, and trades it for a longer service life at the cost of end-of-life recyclability. Apple’s AirTag battery can be swapped in seconds by twisting off the polished steel cover, per Apple’s AirTag battery replacement steps, and the FineTrack 2 is built to be thrown away when its cell finally dies.
The two trackers share the same network. Both rely on Apple’s Find My, which uses nearby iPhones to relay anonymous location pings back to the owner, a network Apple says is now made up of “over a billion” devices. That is the moat neither product can copy, and the one the FineTrack 2 depends on to be useful at all.
Here is the head-to-head, with the AirTag 2 specs pulled from Apple’s current AirTag product page and the FineTrack 2 specs from Ugreen’s launch announcement.
| Spec | Ugreen FineTrack 2 | Apple AirTag 2 |
|---|---|---|
| US price | $19.99 | $29 |
| Battery | Sealed, 5 to 7 years | CR2032, user-replaceable, ~1 year |
| Alarm | 110dB alert | “50% louder speaker” (Apple) |
| Network | Apple Find My | Apple Find My |
| Compatibility | iOS only | iOS only |
| Form factor | Soccer-ball sphere, lanyard | Disc with polished steel cover |
The $45.99 Four-Pack for the Rest of Your Gear
The FineTrack Mini 2 is the tracker for the things you don’t want a soccer ball hanging off. It is more compact than the FineTrack 2, ships in a pack of four for $45.99, and includes protective cases and key-ring attachments. Ugreen rates the Mini 2 for “up to 7 years of battery life,” per the launch announcement, and supports the same Apple Find My features as its bigger sibling.
The Mini 2 ships with reflective strips on the cases for low-light visibility, a small touch that matters when a tracker ends up under a hotel-room bed or a stadium seat. It also comes with the same Apple Find My Lost Mode and item sharing, and pairs to an iPhone the same way: power on, open Find My, tap “Add Item” and pick the tracker from the list.
- 110dB alert, the same volume as the FineTrack 2
- Up to 7 years of battery life on a sealed cell
- Apple Find My integration, Lost Mode and item sharing
- Reflective strips on the cases for low-light spotting
- 4-pack with protective cases and keyrings in the box
Why the 55W Nexode Earns Its Slot in the Kit
The third piece is a 10000mAh power bank rated to 55W. Ugreen says the device supports multiple fast-charging protocols, can power up to three devices at the same time, and can be fully recharged “in around two hours,” per the launch announcement. The unit also ships with an integrated USB-C cable and a small digital display, both aimed at cutting down on the loose-cable mess that comes with stadium day-bags.
Ugreen’s own 2026 World Cup travel gadget guide notes that a 10000mAh pack, “at around 37Wh, sits well under the airline standard, so it won’t slow you down at security,” and that “FIFA allows one personal power bank up to 4.7 x 6.7 inches per person,” which a compact unit clears easily.
At $54.99, the Nexode is the priciest of the three kit pieces. It is also the one item a tournament traveler is most likely to already own, which puts it at the bottom of the must-buy list for anyone already carrying a power bank on game day. Ugreen’s U.S. retail pitch is to sell all three together as a single travel stack.
World Cup Timing and the Los Angeles Fan Festival
The 2026 World Cup is the first to be hosted by three countries, the first to include 48 teams, and the first to run 104 matches across 16 host cities. Tickets are fully digital, with entry at all 16 stadiums requiring a QR code that “only appears a few hours before kickoff, and there’s no paper backup,” per Ugreen’s travel guide. Ugreen’s own framing of the kit is that “your 2026 FIFA World Cup travel essentials come down to three jobs: keep your phone alive, keep your bag tracked, and keep your data working,” per the brand’s travel guide.
Ugreen ran a booth at the FIFA Fan Festival in Los Angeles from June 11 to 14, 2026, with free charging, product showcases and giveaways highlighted in the brand’s own recap. The first goal of the 2026 World Cup was scored by Mexico’s Julián Quiñones on June 11, and the tournament runs through July 19. Ugreen’s launch joins Lenovo’s FIFA tech partnership deal and the fan-transport work in how 16 host cities modeled 5 million trips as part of the tournament’s wider tech rollout.
The iOS-Only Caveat
The FineTrack 2 and FineTrack Mini 2 are iOS-only, a hard limitation that comes from running on Apple’s Find My network. Dong Knows Tech’s review notes that “the FineTrack 2 is compatible only with the iOS ecosystem and will not work with Google’s Android-based FindHub.” For Android users, Ugreen sells a separate FineTrack Slim G on Google’s Find Hub network, but the soccer-ball unit is not part of that lineup.
That puts the FineTrack 2 in the same walled garden as the AirTag, which is also iOS-only. It also means Ugreen’s headline launch leans on the same network Apple built, and on the same pool of iPhones in the stadium to relay location pings. The tracker becomes useless the moment an Android user tries to pair it.
The trade-off for a $19.99 tracker with a 5-to-7-year battery and a 110dB alert is a hard wall around Apple’s ecosystem. For an iPhone-toting World Cup fan that is the desired setup, and for an Android user on the same trip, the soccer ball stays in the store.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Ugreen FineTrack 2 and when did it launch?
The FineTrack 2 is a soccer ball-shaped Bluetooth tracker made by Ugreen, the Shenzhen-based consumer electronics group founded in 2012. The device arrived in June 2026 as the lead item in a three-piece “Game Day Kit” tied to the 2026 FIFA World Cup, and the tracker is on sale in the United States now for $19.99.
How does the FineTrack 2 compare to the Apple AirTag 2?
Apple’s AirTag 2 currently sells for $29 per unit, while the FineTrack 2 lists at $19.99. The FineTrack 2 ships with a sealed battery rated for 5 to 7 years, well past the AirTag’s user-replaceable CR2032 coin cell, which Apple says lasts about a year, and lists a 110dB spec-sheet alarm against Apple’s “50% louder speaker” language. Both run on Apple’s Find My network and work only with iOS.
Does the FineTrack 2 work with Android?
No. The FineTrack 2 and FineTrack Mini 2 run on Apple’s Find My network and are iOS-only. Ugreen sells a separate FineTrack Slim G for Android users, which uses Google’s Find Hub network.
How much does the Ugreen Game Day Kit cost?
Per the launch announcement, the FineTrack 2 costs $19.99, the FineTrack Mini 2 four-pack costs $45.99, and the Nexode Power Bank 10000mAh 55W costs $54.99, with the three also sold together as a bundle through Amazon and the Ugreen Official Store.
Where can I buy the FineTrack 2 in the US?
The FineTrack 2, FineTrack Mini 2 and Nexode power bank are all on sale in the US through the Ugreen Official Store and Amazon, per the launch announcement. The Ugreen Official Store and Amazon are the two listed retail channels, and a Ugreen booth ran at the FIFA Fan Festival in Los Angeles from June 11 to 14, 2026.








