Penstar eNote Pro 10.3" Penstar eNote Pro The Clearest Color E-Ink Paper Tablet | 10.3” Touchscreen 2025 Review

The Penstar eNote Pro has the best color e-ink screen we've seen for under $500, but its software can't quite keep up. It's a fantastic reader and a good note-taker, if you can ignore the gimmicks.

CPU 2.2 GHz
Storage 128 GB
Screen 10.3" 2480x1860
OS Android 14
Stylus Yes
Cellular No
Penstar eNote Pro 10.3" Penstar eNote Pro The Clearest Color E-Ink Paper Tablet | 10.3” Touchscreen 2025 tablet
48.1 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

The best color e-ink tablet for Android tinkerers. A great screen bundled with a good stylus, but let down by so-so software and a premium price. Buy it for the color, not the AI buzzwords.

Overview

The Penstar eNote Pro is a solid color e-ink tablet that nails the basics but gets a bit lost in its own feature list. The one thing you need to know is that it's a great Android e-reader and note-taker with a surprisingly good color screen, but you shouldn't buy it expecting a full tablet replacement. It's for writing, reading, and sketching, period. If you're coming from a black-and-white e-ink device, the Kaleido 3 display feels like a genuine upgrade, but our database shows it's still firmly in the 'specialist tool' category, not an iPad killer.

Performance

The screen is the star here. Scoring in the 80th percentile, the 10.3-inch Kaleido 3 panel is genuinely impressive for an e-ink device. Colors pop more than we expected, and the paper-like texture with the included stylus feels great. Where things get a bit wobbly is in the overall responsiveness. While the CPU and GPU scores are decent for this niche, the 38th percentile RAM ranking shows up in occasional sluggishness when switching between apps or loading complex PDFs. It's fast enough for its core job, but don't expect buttery smooth Android navigation.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 73.7
GPU 74.3
RAM 37.7
Screen 79.6
Battery 46.4
Feature 70.5
Storage 55.3
User Sentiment 24.6
Connectivity 76.2
Social Proof 34.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The color e-ink screen is a real treat for reading comics, magazines, or color-coded notes. 80th
  • The bundled metal stylus and folio cover feel premium and make it ready to use right out of the box. 76th
  • Running full Android 14 is a huge win, letting you install any reading or note app you want from the Play Store. 74th
  • The physical shortcut buttons are a genius addition for quickly jumping between tools without touching the screen. 74th

Cons

  • The AI voice-to-text and handwriting conversion features feel more like marketing checkboxes than polished tools. 25th
  • Battery life is just average for an e-ink device, which is disappointing. 35th
  • At nearly $500, it's a serious investment for a device that still lags in general performance.
  • Some users report frustrating calibration issues with the stylus at the edges of the screen.

The Word on the Street

3.9/5 (27 reviews)
👍 Long-time e-ink users are thrilled with the color display and the freedom of having full Android in this form factor.
👎 A number of buyers are frustrated by buggy stylus calibration, especially near the bottom edge of the screen.
🤔 People love the hardware and reading experience, but find the advertised AI features like voice-to-text to be half-baked gimmicks.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU 2.2 GHz

Memory & Storage

Storage 128 GB

Display

Size 10.3"
Resolution 2480

Connectivity

Wi-Fi WiFi 6

Features

Stylus Support Yes
Stylus Model B6

Physical

Weight 0.4 kg / 1.0 lbs
OS Android 14

Value & Pricing

Worth it? Only if color e-ink is your non-negotiable must-have. At its $499 starting price, it's a fair deal for the bundle you get. But the price spread in our data is insane—some vendors list it for over $95,000, which is obviously a glitch, but it tells you to shop carefully. Stick to Amazon or the official store. For pure black-and-white note-taking, you can get a reMarkable or Boox device for less. You're paying a premium here for color.

Price History

€800 €900 €1,000 €1,100 €1,200 €1,300 €1,400 Mar 30Apr 11Apr 15Apr 19 €933

vs Competition

This sits in a weird spot. Compared to the reMarkable 3, the Penstar wins on color and Android flexibility but loses on that magical paper-like writing feel and ecosystem polish. Next to an Onyx Boox Tab Ultra C, it's a tougher fight. The Boox often has better performance and more refined software, but it usually costs more. Then there's the elephant in the room: a base iPad. For the same money, you get a blazing-fast, gorgeous screen that's terrible for your eyes and a writing experience that feels like plastic on glass. The Penstar is only the right choice if you've already ruled out a standard tablet for eye strain reasons and you really need color.

Spec Penstar eNote Pro 10.3" Penstar eNote Pro The Clearest Color E-Ink Paper Tablet | 10.3” Touchscreen 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 Lenovo Idea Tab Lenovo - Idea Tab Pro - 12.7" 3K Tablet - 8GB RAM Microsoft Surface Pro Microsoft - Surface Pro - Copilot+ PC - 13” - Xiaomi Pad 7 PRO Xiaomi Pad 7 Pro Ai WiFi Version Global (No Calls
CPU 2.2 GHz Apple M5 MediaTek 9300 MediaTek Dimensity Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus X1P-64-100 3 GHz
RAM (GB) - 12 16 8 16 12
Storage (GB) 128 256 1024 256 512 512
Screen 10.3" 2480x1860 13" 2752x2064 14.6" 2960x1848 12.7" 2944x1840 13" 2880x1920 11.2" 3200x2136
OS Android 14 iPadOS Android 14 Android 14 Windows 11 Home Android 14 HyperOS
Stylus true true true true false false
Cellular false false false false false false
Battery (Wh) - 39 - - - -
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamScreenBatteryFeatureStorageUser SentimentConnectivitySocial Proof
Penstar eNote Pro 10.3" Penstar eNote Pro The Clearest Color E-Ink Paper Tablet | 10.3” Touchscreen 73.774.337.779.646.470.555.324.676.234.7
Apple iPad Pro 13" M5 Chip Compare 96.696.384.699.699.595.774.295.786.699.3
Samsung Galaxy Tab S 14.6" 10 Ultra Compare 72.372.990.695.695.499.896.584.996.299.3
Lenovo Idea Tab Pro 12.7" 3K Compare 43.845.474.692.295.295.774.291.796.299.3
Microsoft Surface Pro 13” Compare 98.7989591.946.471.388.1076.295
Xiaomi Pad 7 PRO Pad 7 Pro Ai Compare 81.381.584.699.246.457.888.170.856.192.5

Common Questions

Q: Can I read Kindle books and use Netflix on this?

Yes and kinda. You can install the Kindle app from the Play Store and read just fine. For Netflix, you can install the app, but the slow refresh rate of e-ink makes video look terrible. It's not meant for that.

Q: Is the handwriting-to-text conversion any good?

It's okay for clean, printed handwriting in a supported language. If you scribble like a doctor, it'll struggle. It's a handy feature, but don't expect 100% accuracy.

Q: How's the battery life really?

It's fine. You'll get a week or two of casual reading and note-taking, but with the front light on and WiFi active, it drains faster. It's middle-of-the-pack for e-ink.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for a general-purpose tablet to watch videos, browse the web, and play games, this isn't it. The e-ink screen is too slow for that. Go get a Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 FE instead. Also, if you want the absolute best writing feel on digital paper, the monochrome reMarkable 3 is still the king. Skip the Penstar if pure writing texture is your top priority.

Verdict

We're giving this a cautious recommendation for a very specific person. If you're an e-ink enthusiast who has been waiting for color to become usable, and you want the freedom of Android, the Penstar eNote Pro is a compelling option. The hardware is good, and the screen is great. But if you're new to e-ink or just want a digital notebook, the software quirks and premium price make it harder to justify. Try a black-and-white device first, or spend more for a more polished color competitor like Boox.