SHENZHEN PEICHENG TECHNOLOGY CO.,LTD Tablet 10.1Inch Android 15.0, RAM Review
The Nyxolaria tablet bundle costs just $64, but you're paying for the accessories, not a good tablet. Here's who should (and definitely shouldn't) buy it.
The 30-Second Version
It's a $64 accessory bundle with a mediocre tablet attached. Fine as a beater device for simple tasks, terrible as your main screen.
Overview
Let's cut through the marketing: this is a $64 tablet that comes with a keyboard, mouse, case, and stylus. The one thing you need to know is that you're paying for the bundle, not the tablet. It's a budget device that tries to look like a productivity machine, but our data shows it's weakest at entertainment, which is ironic for a tablet. The specs scream 'value pack,' but the performance tells a different story.
Performance
The performance is exactly what you'd expect for $64. The screen resolution is 1280x800, which lands in the 13th percentile in our database. That means it's one of the blurriest displays you can get on a modern tablet. The GPU is in the 2nd percentile, so don't even think about gaming. The surprise? The '20GB RAM' claim is mostly virtual memory expansion from storage, not actual, fast RAM. It's a clever trick to make the spec sheet look impressive.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- The price is almost impossibly low for a full bundle. 93th
- You get a keyboard, mouse, case, and stylus right in the box.
- The 6000mAh battery should get you through a day of light use.
- Expandable storage up to 1TB is a legitimately great feature.
Cons
- The screen is painfully low-resolution for a 10-inch tablet. 2th
- Performance is sluggish for anything beyond basic web browsing. 14th
- The 'Android 15' claim is highly suspect for a device at this price.
- Build quality feels cheap and plasticky.
The Word on the Street
Specifications
Full Specifications
Processor
| CPU | 2 GHz |
| GPU | X1 |
Memory & Storage
| Storage | 128 GB |
Display
| Size | 10.1" |
| Resolution | 1280 |
| Panel | IPS |
Connectivity
| Wi-Fi | WiFi 5 |
Features
| Stylus Support | Yes |
Physical
| Weight | 0.5 kg / 1.2 lbs |
| OS | Android |
Value & Pricing
For $64, it's hard to complain too much. You're getting a functional tablet and a bunch of accessories for less than the price of a nice dinner. Is it 'worth it'? Only if your expectations are rock bottom and you need all those accessories. As a tablet alone, it's not a good value.
vs Competition
This sits in a weird no-man's-land. Compared to an Amazon Fire HD 10, you get more accessories but worse software and a much worse screen. Against a used older iPad, you get new accessories but dramatically worse performance and app support. The real competition is other ultra-budget Android tablets like the 'N-one' models. The Nyxolaria wins on bundle completeness but loses on any metric of pure tablet quality. If you can stretch your budget even to $150, you enter a completely different league of devices.
| Spec | SHENZHEN PEICHENG TECHNOLOGY CO.,LTD Tablet 10.1Inch Android 15.0, RAM | Apple iPad Pro Apple - 11-inch iPad Pro M5 chip Wi-Fi 256GB with | Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Samsung - Galaxy Tab S10+ - 12.4" 256GB - Wi-Fi - | Microsoft Surface Pro Microsoft - Surface Pro - Copilot+ PC - 13” OLED | Lenovo Lenovo - Idea Tab Pro - 12.7" 3K Tablet - 8GB RAM | GPD GPD Pocket 4: Mini Laptop with AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CPU | 2 GHz | Apple M5 | Mediatek MT6989 | Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100 | MediaTek Dimensity | AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 |
| RAM (GB) | — | 12 | 12 | 32 | 8 | 32 |
| Storage (GB) | 128 | 256 | 256 | 1000 | 256 | 2048 |
| Screen | 10.1" 1280x800 | 11" 2420x1668 | 12.4" 2800x1752 | 13" 2880x1920 | 12.7" 2944x1840 | 8.8" 2560x1600 |
| OS | Android | iPadOS | Android 14 | Windows 11 Home | Android 14 | Windows 11 Home |
| Stylus | true | true | true | false | true | false |
| Cellular | false | false | false | false | false | false |
Common Questions
Q: Is the 20GB RAM real?
Not really. It uses 4GB of physical RAM and 'expands' by using 16GB of your storage as slower virtual memory. It's a marketing gimmick.
Q: Can I watch Netflix on it?
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Q: Is this good for a student?
No. Our scores show it's weak for productivity. A cheap used laptop or a previous-gen iPad would be a far better investment for schoolwork.
Who Should Skip This
If you're looking for a tablet to actually enjoy videos, browse the web smoothly, or use more than two apps at once, this isn't it. Go get a refurbished iPad 9th Gen or an Amazon Fire HD 10 instead. You'll thank us.
Verdict
We can't recommend this as your main tablet. It's a classic 'you get what you pay for' scenario. The bundle is tempting, but the core device is too compromised. Buy this only as a secondary, disposable device for a very specific, simple task—like a dedicated recipe viewer in the kitchen or a kids' doodle pad where you won't cry if it breaks. For any real productivity, studying, or media consumption, save up for something better.