



Let me start by saying this tablet punches WAY above its price tag. The FHD IPS screen is shockingly vibrant for a budget device – I binge-watched Stranger Things on Netflix (yes, Widevine L1 works perfectly) and didn't miss my iPad one bit. Those dual speakers? Louder than my morning alarm (in a good way).
The Unisoc T615 processor handled my multitasking madness like a champ – Slack, Spotify, and 15 Chrome tabs open simultaneously? No stutters. Though hardcore gamers might notice frame drops in Genshin Impact at max settings.
Battery life had me doing a double-take. After 6 hours of YouTube + web browsing, I still had 38% left. The 18W fast charging is legit too – went from 20% to 75% during my lunch break.
Now the quirks: Whoever designed the button layout clearly never used a tablet. I kept accidentally hitting volume when trying to lock it. And that SD card slot? It's like playing Operation – you'll need surgeon-level precision to eject cards without feeling like you're breaking something.
The camera...exists. It's fine for Zoom calls if your standards are underground-low. But let's be real – if you're buying this for photography, we need to have a different conversation.
Pro tip: Skip the included USB-C cable (mine died in 3 days) and invest in Bluetooth headphones since there's no jack. For under $200 though? This might be the best value Android tablet I've tested this year – just bring some patience for its odd design choices.
