I thought it was pretty solid and looks good. The back of the exterior is mostly metal and gives the impression of a fairly premium tablet. On an 8-inch screen, the 1920 x 1200 resolution looks pretty sharp. The screen looks good, if not as bright and vibrant as some of the high-end tablets I've seen, but that's fine for a budget tablet. It works like stock Android, no factory settings that I could see. It contained only core Android apps, so malware took up little to no storage space. It's not a powerhouse, but it runs pretty smoothly. I downloaded some games like PUBG and Call of Duty which were more graphics intensive and they ran but I had to disable the settings. This isn't the tablet I would recommend if you're focused on gaming with the highest graphics possible. You'll probably have to pay more for it. It is designed for streaming, web browsing and similar basic tasks and does a good job. Standard HD movies looked pretty good. The weakest point is the camera. The photos just don't look very sharp or pretty (I uploaded an example). I rarely use the camera on my tablets as I have a phone for that. I expect a few compromises from a tablet at this price point, which is why I didn't deduct points for them. It has one connector, USB C, and I couldn't connect an external display to it or anything with it. except for charging and data transfer, even when using a hub that I have tested with other devices. For example, if you want to connect to an external display or use a controller with a wired connection, it doesn't seem possible. I was able to connect an X-Box controller via Bluetooth with no problems. The battery life was about as they claimed. In fact, they were realistic in the listing, which is quite rare. When they state battery life, it's usually based on running the display at the lowest settings while doing next to nothing on the tablet. At this table you could spend at least five hours watching movies, reading, surfing the Internet. Face ID didn't work very well for me, but after revamping it I had better luck. The speaker isn't bad for a tablet and can be surprisingly loud.
HP Pavilion Gaming Desktop Computer, Ryzen 5 3500 Processor, NVIDIA GTX 1650 4 GB, 8 GB RAM, 512 GB SSD, Windows 10 Home (TG01-0030, Black)
11 Review
Notebook DELL G7 17 7790 (1920x1080, Intel Core i5 2.4 GHz, RAM 8 GB, SSD 256 GB, HDD 1000 GB, GeForce GTX 1660 Ti, Win10 Home)
26 Review
27" Apple iMac All-in-One (Retina 5K, Mid 2020) MXWT2RU/A, 5120x2880, Intel Core i5 3.1GHz, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD, AMD Radeon Pro 5300, MacOS, Silver
13 Review
14" ASUS Vivobook Pro 14X OLED N7400PC-KM059 2880x1800, Intel Core i5 11300H 3.1GHz, RAM 16GB, DDR4, SSD 512GB, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3050, no OS, 90NB0U44-M01450, silver
25 Review