BOOX Note Max 13.3 No Frontlight B/W ePaper Notebook 300 PPI 6G 128G Review
The BOOX Note Max 13.3 offers a massive E Ink screen for reading, but our scoring reveals it's a poor performer as a general tablet. It's a specialist tool with glaring weaknesses.
The 30-Second Version
The BOOX Note Max 13.3 has a best-in-class 13.3" E Ink screen for reading and writing, but it's a one-trick pony. Our scoring puts it in the bottom third of tablets for overall productivity. Only buy this if you live in PDFs and need an Android-powered digital legal pad. For anything else, get a regular tablet.
Overview
The BOOX Note Max 13.3 is a specialist's tool, not a general-purpose tablet. Its headline feature is a massive 13.3-inch E Ink screen with a sharp 300 PPI resolution, making it one of the largest and clearest digital notepads you can buy. It runs a full version of Android 13, which means you can install apps like Kindle or Google Drive directly, a flexibility most e-readers don't offer.
But you're trading a lot for that screen. Our scoring puts it in the bottom half of tablets overall, with a total score of 35.3 out of 100. Its weakest area is productivity at 23.2, which tells you this isn't built for multitasking or office work. It's a device with a very specific job: reading, annotating, and writing on a big, paper-like display.
Performance
Performance is a mixed bag, heavily dependent on what you're doing. For its core task of rendering text and handling pen input, the octa-core CPU and 6GB of RAM are solid, landing in the 77th percentile for processing power. That means it's well above average for an e-ink device, and the BOOX Super Refresh tech does help minimize the laggy feeling that plagues cheaper e-paper screens. You can even watch a video in 'Ultrafast Mode' if you're determined, though it'll look like a ghostly flipbook.
Where it falls short is in everything else. The 6GB of RAM is mediocre (35th percentile), which limits how many apps you can keep open. The Wi-Fi 5 and Bluetooth 5.0 connectivity is about average (59th percentile), and the 3,700mAh battery is right in the middle of the pack (49th percentile) for a tablet this size. This thing is fast for an e-reader, but slow for a tablet.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Massive, sharp 13.3" 300 PPI E Ink screen is best-in-class for size and clarity. 81th
- Full Android 13 OS allows installation of any app from the Play Store. 81th
- CPU performance is well above average for e-ink devices, making note-taking feel responsive.
- No frontlight means better contrast and a more paper-like reading experience.
- 128GB of storage is ample for a vast library of documents and notes.
Cons
- Overall tablet performance is weak, scoring in the bottom third for productivity. 27th
- Only 6GB of RAM limits multitasking and is a letdown for a device this expensive. 28th
- The screen, while great for reading, scores poorly (24th percentile) for general tablet use like video or web browsing.
- Battery life is just average, not the week-long endurance you might expect from e-ink.
- It's heavy at 615g, making it less portable than smaller e-readers or slates.
The Word on the Street
Specifications
Full Specifications
Processor
| CPU | 2.8 GHz |
Memory & Storage
| Storage | 128 GB |
Display
| Size | 13.3" |
Connectivity
| Wi-Fi | WiFi 5 |
Physical
| Weight | 1.2 kg / 2.6 lbs |
| OS | Android |
Value & Pricing
The price is all over the map, ranging from $820 to a steep $1,422 depending on the vendor. That's a $602 spread, so shopping around is crucial. At the lower end, you're paying a premium for that unique big e-ink screen and Android flexibility. At the high end, you're entering iPad Pro territory for a device that can't do half of what an iPad can. The value proposition only makes sense if your workflow is 90% reading and annotating PDFs or taking handwritten notes.
vs Competition
Stacked against the competition, the BOOX Note Max is in a weird niche. An Apple iPad Pro with an M-series chip will run circles around it in every performance metric, has a gorgeous color screen, and costs about the same at the high end. But you can't read on it for hours without eye strain, and the writing feel isn't the same. Compared to a dedicated e-reader like a Kindle Scribe, the BOOX wins on screen size, Android apps, and file format support, but loses on simplicity, battery life, and often, price. The Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus offers a better media and general-use experience for less money. This BOOX only wins if you specifically need a giant Android e-ink canvas.
| Spec | BOOX Note Max 13.3 No Frontlight B/W ePaper Notebook 300 PPI 6G 128G | Apple iPad Pro Apple 13" iPad Pro M5 Chip (Standard Glass, 256GB, | Samsung Galaxy Tab S Samsung 14.6" Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra 1TB Multi-Touch | Microsoft Surface Pro Microsoft - Surface Pro - Copilot+ PC - 13” OLED | Lenovo Idea Tab Lenovo - Idea Tab Pro - 12.7" 3K Tablet - 8GB RAM | HP WIN MAX GPD Win MAX 2 2025 Handheld Gaming PC with AMD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CPU | 2.8 GHz | Apple M5 | MediaTek 9300 | Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100 | MediaTek Dimensity | AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 |
| RAM (GB) | - | 12 | 16 | 32 | 8 | 32 |
| Storage (GB) | 128 | 256 | 1024 | 1000 | 256 | 2048 |
| Screen | 13.3" | 13" 2752x2064 | 14.6" 2960x1848 | 13" 2880x1920 | 12.7" 2944x1840 | 10.1" 1920x1200 |
| OS | Android | iPadOS | Android 14 | Windows 11 Home | Android 14 | Windows 11 Home |
| Stylus | false | true | true | false | true | true |
| Cellular | false | false | false | false | false | false |
| Battery (Wh) | - | 39 | - | 53 | - | 67 |
| Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare |
| Product | Cpu | Gpu | Ram | Screen | Battery | Feature | Storage | Connectivity | Social Proof |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BOOX Note Max 13.3 No Frontlight B/W ePaper Notebook 300 PPI 6G 128G | 80.7 | 81 | 37.7 | 27.7 | 46.2 | 26.8 | 55.3 | 56.1 | 45 |
| Apple iPad Pro 13" M5 Chip Compare | 96.6 | 96.3 | 84.6 | 99.6 | 99.5 | 95.7 | 74.2 | 86.6 | 99.3 |
| Samsung Galaxy Tab S 14.6" 10 Ultra Compare | 72.3 | 72.9 | 90.6 | 95.6 | 95.1 | 99.8 | 96.5 | 96.2 | 99.3 |
| Microsoft Surface Pro 13” Compare | 99.6 | 98.4 | 98.3 | 98 | 99.8 | 64.1 | 94 | 89.9 | 92.5 |
| Lenovo Idea Tab Pro 12.7" 3K Compare | 43.8 | 45.4 | 74.5 | 92.2 | 94.9 | 95.7 | 74.2 | 96.2 | 99.3 |
| HP WIN MAX GPD Win MAX 2 2025 Handheld Compare | 98.1 | 97.8 | 97.3 | 47.7 | 99.9 | 79.8 | 99.9 | 76.1 | 41.8 |
Common Questions
Q: Can I use this like a normal Android tablet for web browsing and apps?
Technically yes, but it won't be a good experience. The E Ink screen refreshes slowly, making scrolling look choppy, and its performance for general tablet tasks scores in the bottom quarter of our database. It's built for static content.
Q: How is the battery life for reading?
It's average. The 3,700mAh battery lands in the 49th percentile, so expect days of use, not weeks. This isn't a Kindle with month-long battery; the powerful CPU and Android OS drain it faster than a basic e-reader.
Q: Is the writing experience with the stylus good?
Yes, this is a strong point. The 4,096 levels of pressure sensitivity and the large glass screen provide a solid, responsive feel for note-taking. Combined with the capable CPU (77th percentile), latency is minimal for an e-ink device.
Who Should Skip This
Skip this if you need a do-it-all tablet. The data is clear: its productivity score of 23.2 is a major weak spot. If you plan to edit documents, video call, stream movies, or juggle more than a couple of apps, you'll be frustrated by the slow E Ink screen and limited 6GB of RAM. This device lags behind most modern tablets for general use.
Verdict
We can only recommend the BOOX Note Max 13.3 if you're a researcher, student, or professional who spends entire days reading and marking up large-format PDFs, technical papers, or manuscripts. Its big, clear screen and Android app support are legitimately excellent for that one job. For anyone else—someone who wants to watch videos, browse the web comfortably, or use more than one or two apps at a time—this is a hard pass. The data shows it's a specialist tool that underperforms as a general tablet.