MENTUME Android 16 Tablet, 11 Inch Tablet Android, Gemini Review

The $159 Android 16 Tablet includes a keyboard and stylus, but its CPU performance lands in the 1st percentile. We dig into the data to see if this budget bundle is a steal or a slog.

CPU AMD Ryzen 3 1200
Storage 1 TB
Screen 11"
OS Android 16
Stylus Yes
Cellular No
MENTUME Android 16 Tablet, 11 Inch Tablet Android, Gemini tablet
36.2 종합 점수

The 30-Second Version

CPU performance is in the 1st percentile, making this one of the slowest tablets we've seen. Its main selling points are the massive 95th-percentile storage and the included keyboard and stylus for only $159. Only consider it if budget is your absolute top priority and you're prepared for significant performance limitations.

Overview

At $159, the Android 16 Tablet is a budget proposition that makes some very big promises. It claims an octa-core processor, 24GB of RAM, and a 90Hz display, all wrapped in a package that includes a keyboard and stylus. The reality is a bit more complicated. Our data shows its CPU performance lands in the 1st percentile, which is about as low as it gets, and its GPU isn't much better at the 5th percentile. That's a massive red flag for a device marketed for smooth gaming and multitasking.

Where it does deliver is on storage, hitting the 95th percentile with its 256GB internal space plus a 1TB microSD card slot. The feature set is also decent at the 77th percentile, thanks to the included accessories and stylus support. But you can't escape the core performance numbers. This tablet is built for a very specific, undemanding user who values accessories and space over speed.

Performance

Let's be direct: the performance story here is rough. A CPU in the 1st percentile means this is one of the slowest tablets we've tested in its class. That octa-core AMD 1200 chip is ancient by modern standards, and it shows. In practical terms, expect noticeable lag when switching between more than a couple of apps, and forget about any kind of demanding gaming or creative work. The GPU score in the 5th percentile confirms that. The 90Hz display is a nice touch, but the processor can't consistently feed it frames to make that smoothness matter in anything beyond basic scrolling.

The bright spot is the storage. With 256GB on board and expandability to over a terabyte, you're in the 95th percentile for sheer space. That's great for loading up with media files. The 8000mAh battery is middle-of-the-road at the 49th percentile, so you'll get a day of light use, but the WiFi 5 connectivity (44th percentile) feels dated when many competitors offer WiFi 6.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 0.9
GPU 3.9
RAM 35.3
Screen 42.1
Battery 49
Feature 82.7
Storage 95.7
Connectivity 59.9
Social Proof 34.6

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Massive storage potential lands in the 95th percentile, with 256GB built-in plus a 1TB microSD slot. 96th
  • The included keyboard, mouse, and stylus push its feature score to a respectable 77th percentile. 83th
  • The 90Hz IPS display is a nice perk for a budget tablet, scoring in the 57th percentile for screen quality.
  • The 8000mAh battery provides adequate, if not stellar, all-day life for basic tasks.
  • At $159 with all the accessories, the upfront cost of entry is undeniably low.

Cons

  • CPU performance is in the 1st percentile, making it one of the slowest tablets we track. 1th
  • GPU performance is nearly as bad at the 5th percentile, ruling out any serious gaming or graphics work. 4th
  • The advertised '24GB RAM' uses virtual memory expansion, with real physical RAM likely being just 8GB (35th percentile). 35th
  • WiFi 5 connectivity is dated and scores in the 44th percentile, lagging behind modern tablets.
  • With only two reviews, its social proof score of 29% means we have very little real-world data to go on.

The Word on the Street

5.0/5 (2 reviews)
👍 Early users praise the sharp and smooth 90Hz display for media consumption and basic browsing.
👍 The inclusion of a keyboard, stylus, and large storage right out of the box is seen as great value for the price.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU AMD Ryzen 3 1200
Cores 4

Memory & Storage

Storage 1 TB

Display

Size 11"
Panel IPS

Connectivity

Wi-Fi WiFi 5

Features

Stylus Support Yes

Physical

Weight 1.4 kg / 3.1 lbs
OS Android 16

Value & Pricing

The value proposition hinges entirely on what you need. For $159, you get a tablet, a keyboard, a mouse, and a stylus. That's a complete 2-in-1 kit for less than the price of most standalone keyboards. If your needs are strictly web browsing, reading, and video streaming on a big screen, it's a cheap way to check those boxes. However, the abysmal CPU and GPU performance mean you're sacrificing all future-proofing and responsiveness. You're paying for accessories and storage, not speed. Compared to even a used older-generation iPad or Galaxy Tab, you'd get a much faster core experience, though you'd likely have to buy accessories separately.

Price History

$155 $160 $165 $170 $175 Mar 11Mar 22 $170

vs Competition

Stacked against the competition, the trade-offs are stark. An Apple iPad (even an older model) or a Samsung Galaxy Tab S-series will absolutely demolish this tablet in CPU and GPU performance, often by 80-90 percentile points. They'll also have better screens, better build quality, and longer software support. What they won't have is this price tag with all the accessories included. The Lenovo Idea Tab Pro, for instance, offers a much better 3K display and more reliable performance for a higher price. The HP and Microsoft options are in a different league entirely as full PCs. This Android 16 tablet exists in its own niche: it's for the buyer whose budget is rigid at $160 and who wants the physical kit of a productivity setup above all else, accepting that the brain inside will be painfully slow.

Spec MENTUME Android 16 Tablet, 11 Inch Tablet Android, Gemini Apple iPad Pro Apple 11" iPad Pro M5 Chip (Standard Glass, 512GB, Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Samsung 12.4" Galaxy Tab S10+ 256GB Multi-Touch Microsoft Surface Pro Microsoft - Surface Pro - Copilot+ PC - 13” OLED Lenovo Yoga Tab Series Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus Xiaomi Xiaomi Redmi Pad 2 Only WiFi (No Calls or Text)
CPU AMD Ryzen 3 1200 Apple M5 MediaTek 9300 Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100 Qualcomm® Snapdragon® 8 Gen 3, QCM8650 2.2 GHz mediatek_helio
RAM (GB) - 12 12 32 16 -
Storage (GB) 1024 512 256 1000 256 256
Screen 11" 11" 2420x1668 12.4" 2800x1752 13" 2880x1920 12.7" 2944x1840 11" 2560x1600
OS Android 16 iPadOS Android 14 Windows 11 Home Android 14 Android 15
Stylus true true true false false false
Cellular false false false false false false

Common Questions

Q: Is the 24GB RAM real?

Not really. It uses a combination of physical and virtual (extended) RAM. Our data suggests the physical RAM is likely 8GB, which places it in the 35th percentile—below average for tablets. The '24GB' figure is a marketing tactic for memory expansion, not dedicated high-speed RAM.

Q: Can it run games smoothly?

Not demanding ones. With a GPU performance score in the 5th percentile, it's near the bottom of the pack for graphics power. It might handle very simple 2D games, but any modern 3D game will struggle with low frame rates and poor detail.

Q: How does Gemini AI work on this tablet?

It's a software feature, but the hardware limits its usefulness. With a CPU in the 1st percentile, AI-assisted tasks like drafting emails or planning may be slower and less responsive than on a device with a more powerful processor. Think of it as a basic helper, not a powerful co-pilot.

Who Should Skip This

Anyone who needs speed or plans to do more than the basics should look elsewhere. Students needing snappy research and multitasking, artists using design apps, or productivity users who hate lag will be frustrated by the 1st-percentile CPU. Gamers should skip due to the 5th-percentile GPU. If you value a premium, responsive experience or need your device to last for years, this tablet's fundamental performance weaknesses make it a poor choice.

Verdict

We can only recommend this tablet with major, glaring caveats. If your budget is locked at $160 and you absolutely need a tablet with a keyboard and stylus right now for the most basic tasks—think typing documents, watching Netflix, and reading—it technically works. But you must go in knowing it will feel sluggish, it won't run modern games well, and its long-term usability is questionable. For anyone who can stretch their budget another $100-$150, the performance and quality jump to a used brand-name tablet is astronomical and a much smarter investment. This is a classic case of getting what you pay for, and here you're paying for accessories, not a powerful tablet.