reMarkable reMarkable Starter Bundle – reMarkable 2 is The Review

The reMarkable 2 offers a fantastic paper-like writing experience, but it's a slow, expensive one-trick pony. Here's who it's actually for.

CPU ARM
Storage 8 GB
Screen 10.3" 1872x1404
OS Linux
Stylus No
Cellular No
reMarkable reMarkable Starter Bundle – reMarkable 2 is The tablet
28.8 Overall Score

Overview

The reMarkable 2 is a digital notebook that tries to replace your paper. It's thin, light, and the screen really does feel like writing on paper. But let's be clear, this isn't a tablet. There's no app store, no email, and no color. It's a single-purpose tool for writing, reading, and annotating documents.

Performance

Performance is a mixed bag. The writing experience is its best feature, with almost no lag and a genuinely paper-like texture. Battery life is solid, hitting that two-week mark with light use. But everything else is slow. Syncing files can take a moment, and the processor feels dated. It's fine for flipping through a PDF, but don't expect it to do anything else quickly.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 44.3
GPU 46.1
RAM 35.5
Screen 60.2
Battery 48.8
Feature 19.4
Storage 0.7
Connectivity 43.8
Social Proof 77

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The paper-like writing feel is unmatched. 77th
  • Incredibly thin, light, and portable.
  • No distractions from apps or notifications.
  • Excellent battery life for a focused device.

Cons

  • It's painfully slow at anything besides writing. 1th
  • Only 8GB of storage is shockingly low. 19th
  • The black and white screen limits its use.
  • It's expensive for what is essentially a fancy notepad.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU ARM

Memory & Storage

Storage 8 GB

Display

Size 10.3"
Resolution 1872

Connectivity

Wi-Fi WiFi 5
Cellular No

Physical

Weight 0.4 kg / 0.9 lbs
OS Linux

Value & Pricing

At $449, the value proposition is tough. You're paying a premium for that specific writing feel and a distraction-free experience. If you take tons of handwritten notes and hate glossy screens, it might be worth it. For everyone else, that's a lot of money for a device that does one thing well and everything else poorly.

$449

vs Competition

Compared to an iPad, the reMarkable loses badly on specs, speed, and versatility. But that's the point. An iPad is a jack-of-all-trades. The reMarkable is a master of one. The better comparison is to other e-ink tablets like the Supernote or Boox devices. Those often offer more features and flexibility for similar money, but the reMarkable still has the best 'paper' feel. Against a standard Android tablet, there's no contest on features, but the reMarkable wins on focus and battery.

Verdict

Buy this only if you are a dedicated note-taker who craves a paper-like feel above all else and can afford a luxury tool. Students needing versatility or anyone who wants to do more than write and read PDFs should look at a standard tablet instead.