XP-PEN XPPen 3 in 1 Color Digital Notebook 10.95'' Paper Review

The XP-PEN Magic Note Pad is a digital notebook first and a tablet second. Its paper-like screen is perfect for notes, but its mediocre performance makes it a poor choice for anything else.

CPU MediaTek
RAM 6 GB
Storage 128 GB
Screen 10.9"
OS Android 14
Stylus No
Cellular No
XP-PEN XPPen 3 in 1 Color Digital Notebook 10.95'' Paper tablet
43.1 التقييم العام

The 30-Second Version

Think of this as a turbocharged digital notebook, not a real tablet. The paper-like screen is fantastic for notes and reading, but performance is mediocre for anything else. Only buy it if you live in a PDF.

Overview

Let's get one thing straight right away: this isn't an e-ink tablet. The XP-PEN Magic Note Pad is an Android tablet with a clever screen coating that tries to feel like paper. That's the one thing you need to know. It's a focused device built almost entirely for reading and note-taking, and it's surprisingly good at those jobs. If you're expecting a general-purpose tablet powerhouse, you'll be disappointed. But if you want a digital notebook that's easier on the eyes than a standard iPad, this is a genuinely interesting option.

Performance

The performance is exactly what you'd expect from a MediaTek chip and 6GB of RAM: solidly middle of the pack. It's not going to win any speed tests against an iPad Pro. What surprised me was how well the 90Hz refresh rate and the X3 Pro Pencil work together. The writing experience is smooth with minimal lag, which is crucial for a note-taking device. Our database shows it scores well above average for reading tasks, but it's a real letdown for anything involving art or design, which makes sense given its focus.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 44.1
GPU 45.8
RAM 68
Screen 28.2
Battery 48.7
Feature 27.3
Storage 56
Connectivity 57.2
Social Proof 82.2

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The paper-like screen coating is fantastic for reducing glare and eye strain during long reading or writing sessions. 82th
  • The X3 Pro Pencil feels great, with good pressure sensitivity and convenient magnetic attachment. 68th
  • The three color display modes (Monochrome, Light Color, Nature Color) are a clever way to tailor the screen for different tasks.
  • The native XPPen Notes app is packed with useful features like handwriting-to-text conversion and PDF editing, and it's free forever.

Cons

  • This is not a powerful tablet. Multitasking or running intensive apps is a recipe for frustration. 27th
  • The screen quality, while easy on the eyes, ranks in the bottom third for tablets. Don't expect vibrant, beautiful colors. 28th
  • It's weirdly expensive at some retailers. We've seen prices from a reasonable $260 to a laughable $73,000+.
  • It's terrible for creative work. Our scores place it in the bottom 10% for art and design use cases.

The Word on the Street

4.3/5 (214 reviews)
👍 Students and heavy note-takers love the focused writing experience and the eye-friendly screen, calling it a game-changer for their workflow.
👍 Many buyers are impressed with the three color modes, finding they perfectly match different needs like reading novels versus reviewing documents.
👎 A common complaint is confusion from people who thought they were buying an e-ink Kindle competitor and were surprised by a standard LCD screen.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU MediaTek

Memory & Storage

RAM 6 GB
Storage 128 GB

Display

Size 10.95"

Physical

Weight 0.3 kg / 0.7 lbs
OS Android 14

Value & Pricing

At its normal street price of around $260, it's a decent value for a dedicated note-taker with a unique screen. At anything approaching $500, let alone the insane prices some vendors list, it's a complete rip-off. Stick to Amazon where the pricing is sane. For the right person, it's worth it. For everyone else, it's not.

‏٥٠٠ CA$

vs Competition

This sits in a weird niche. It's not trying to beat the Apple iPad Pro on power or the Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 on screen quality. Its real competition is the reMarkable 2 and other e-ink devices. Compared to a reMarkable, the XP-PEN offers color, a faster 90Hz screen, and full Android app access, but its battery life is just average and the writing feel, while good, isn't quite as paper-like. The Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus is another competitor with a great screen for reading, but it's more of a media consumption device than a dedicated note-taker.

Spec XP-PEN XPPen 3 in 1 Color Digital Notebook 10.95'' Paper Apple iPad Pro Apple 11" iPad Pro M5 Chip (Standard Glass, 512GB, Microsoft Surface Pro Microsoft - Surface Pro - Copilot+ PC - 13” OLED Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Samsung 12.4" Galaxy Tab S10+ 256GB Multi-Touch Lenovo Yoga Tab Series Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus HP GPD Win MAX 2 2025 Handheld Gaming PC with AMD
CPU MediaTek Apple M5 Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100 MediaTek 9300 Qualcomm® Snapdragon® 8 Gen 3, QCM8650 AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370
RAM (GB) 6 12 32 12 16 32
Storage (GB) 128 512 1000 256 256 2048
Screen 10.9" 11" 2420x1668 13" 2880x1920 12.4" 2800x1752 12.7" 2944x1840 10.1" 1920x1200
OS Android 14 iPadOS Windows 11 Home Android 14 Android 14 Windows 11 Home
Stylus false true true true false false
Cellular false false false false false false

Common Questions

Q: Can I use this for drawing or digital art?

Honestly, no. Our performance data puts it in the bottom 10% for art and design. The pressure-sensitive pen is good for notes, but the screen and processing power aren't suited for serious creative work.

Q: Is the battery life as good as an e-ink tablet?

Nope. With its 8000mAh battery and LCD screen, it's about average for a tablet. You'll get a day or two of note-taking, not weeks like a Kindle. Don't expect e-ink levels of endurance.

Q: Can I install apps like Netflix or Spotify?

Yes, it runs full Android 14 and has the Google Play Store. Just know that the mediocre processor and mid-tier GPU mean it's not great for gaming or heavy apps. It's best for reading, notes, and light apps.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for a do-it-all tablet for work, play, and creativity, this isn't it. Go get a base model iPad instead. Also, if you truly want the e-ink experience for reading novels, get a Kindle or a reMarkable. This device lives in the middle, and that's not for everyone.

Verdict

If you are a student or professional who takes a massive amount of handwritten notes and reads a lot of PDFs, and you find regular tablet screens give you eye strain, this is a compelling buy at its ~$260 price point. For anyone else—especially if you want to do anything creative, multitask, or just have a single device for everything—you should look at a standard iPad or Android tablet instead. This is a specialist tool, not a daily driver.