I've also got an Orbea gain. It's the cheapest aluminum frame version and weighs about 38 pounds on its own, plus I am a significantly heavier rider than Jaxx at 270 pounds (losing a big chunk of that is the reason I got this bike!)
I did
this ride last night. A couple of notes about the data shown there: foremost, I have the assist ranges turned down from default and use half the level 1 boost, 75% of level 2 and all of level 3, next-- for whatever reason -- the eBike Motion software doubles the altitude, It also uses weather data from some aggregated weather source rather than local measurements. The actual temperature averaged around 53 degrees.
So, the quick summary there is this is a
very bad scenario for a bike like this -- that is, smaller battery, weaker motor, etc -- I treated this as a recovery ride since I've been trying to reestablish a regular schedule of rides and wasn't feeling fully recovered from the previous, so I liberally used the assist. I had 24% of the battery remaining when I got home.
There is no resistance when riding without assist, though because the sensor is cadence based, it can sometimes feel like there is. What happens is it can take a few moments for the motor to shut off when you stop pedaling. Those tenths of a second where the bike is actively pushing forward without any help from you give a false impression of the normal level of resistance, so when the motor does shut off it feels like you've ridden into sand. Once you understand what's happening you can sort of mentally compensate and it's not a problem.
When I ride on flats I can run in assist level 1 (at half normal power) and it gives me just enough push that the bike feels no heavier than my aluminum gravel bike, use more juice for the few hills, and still get about 1 mile per percent of battery used. At my weight. I don't actually have the eBike Motion recording with battery levels for any of my flat rides because I haven't done them on this bike, only the carbon demo bike that lead to buying this one.
The bike does not remove the workout from climbing hills (or even riding flats if you want to go fast), but at my current weight and level of fitness, I simply wouldn't be able to do the ride I linked here on even my carbon bike, and I can do it without pushing myself very hard on the Gain. I assume any of the eBike Motion-based bikes will be similar.
Edited to add: eBike motions' cadence numbers are also... Uh, wrong. My average cadence was 75 or 80.