I'm not sure there's much of an ecosystem. It's just three products and I don't think the guy even looked at the budget tablet.
Usually you end up with products from the same manufacturer because there is a package deal or promotion sale. Which is the case now for their earbuds.
Yeah, no. I want too choose my gadgets. I want to pair a garmin watch with sennheiser headphones, running my music from a sony phone or a fairphone. That's what standards are for.
Most consumers aren't just buying one of the best Android phones. They're buying into a mobile ecosystem that includes smartphones and devices like great smartwatches, earbuds, tablets, and laptops.
I bought a Pixel watch when my Garmin finally died and got a Pixel phone a few months before that to finally get out of Apple's ecosystem. I did buy a tablet before that ran Android to make sure I didn't hate it (and nearly gave up on it because my Amazon Fire Tablet was so shit, but I ended up replacing it with a better tablet), but I couldn't care less about a pixel tablet or earbuds (well, headphones in my case; I despise earbuds), etc.
Many companies reserve certain features for use only within their compatible product range (looks at Samsung for their gatekeeping of Galaxy Watch features to Samsung phones only; heck even TWS manufacturers sometimes bake a feature or two exclusively for use with their phone series only). I wonder if Oneplus offerings are completely platform agnostic or not.
Unfortunately, OnePlus began to lock their Phones with OnePlus 7 and latest Android versions. It was very hard to install LineageOS under these circumstances.
I had brought the first OnePlus that was based on invite system. It was fairly priced then. After 5t it went down hill. Carl pei the founder jumped ship and using customers naive to boost his subpar "nothing" phone on inflated price. You'll get better hardware for same price. You can remove the bloatware after that's nothing much.