Relndoo Android Tablet with Keyboard, Android 15 Tablet 10 Review

The Relndoo TB02 offers a keyboard, mouse, and stylus for just $120. We tested it to see if this Android 15 bundle is a unbelievable deal or a warning sign in a box.

CPU ARM
Storage 256 GB
Screen 10.1"
OS Android 15
Stylus Yes
Cellular No
Relndoo Android Tablet with Keyboard, Android 15 Tablet 10 tablet
34.2 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

A $120 bundle that includes the kitchen sink. It works for checking email and watching videos, but don't expect it to last. You're buying accessories and getting a tablet thrown in for free.

Overview

The Relndoo TB02 is a $120 Android tablet that comes with a keyboard, mouse, and stylus. That's the one thing you need to know. It's a full bundle for the price of a cheap tablet, and it's running Android 15. Is it any good? For the price, it's a surprisingly complete package that tries to be a laptop, a drawing pad, and an entertainment device all at once. But you have to understand what you're getting: a budget tablet with some clever marketing around its '26GB' of RAM.

Performance

The performance is exactly what you'd expect from a budget tablet—it's fine for the basics and surprisingly bad at anything else. Our data shows its CPU and GPU scores land in the 41st and 43rd percentiles, which means it's slower than most tablets out there. The big surprise is the battery life. Despite the 8000mAh cell, its battery score is only in the 48th percentile. Multiple users report it drains faster than expected, which lines up with our findings that it's a weak spot for a device marketed for productivity and travel.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 44.3
GPU 46.1
RAM 35.5
Screen 34
Battery 48.8
Feature 76.5
Storage 75.9
Connectivity 11.2
Social Proof 45.5

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong feature (76th percentile) 77th
  • Strong storage (74th percentile) 76th

Cons

  • Below average connectivity (13th percentile) 11th
  • Below average screen (32th percentile) 34th
  • Below average ram (33th percentile)

The Word on the Street

4.1/5 (60 reviews)
👍 Many buyers are shocked that a tablet this cheap works at all, praising it for basic student and streaming tasks.
👎 A common complaint is rapidly draining battery life, contradicting the marketed 'all-day' use claim.
👎 Several users report severe glitches, slowness, and units that are basically defective out of the box.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU ARM

Memory & Storage

Storage 256 GB

Display

Size 10.1"

Features

Stylus Support Yes

Physical

Weight 1.4 kg / 3.0 lbs
OS Android 15

Value & Pricing

For $120, it's worth it if your expectations are rock bottom. You're getting a functional tablet and a typing solution for less than the cost of a standalone Bluetooth keyboard. Just don't expect it to replace a real laptop or compete with an iPad. It's a disposable tool for very light tasks.

$120

vs Competition

Compared to an entry-level iPad or a Samsung Galaxy Tab A, the Relndoo wins on bundled accessories but loses on every performance and quality metric. Those devices have better screens, faster chips, and will receive updates for years. The Relndoo's real competition is other no-name Android bundles on Amazon. Against them, it holds its own with the latest OS and decent storage, but you're gambling on build quality either way. If you can stretch your budget to $250, a refurbished iPad or a Lenovo Tab P11 is a massively better investment.

Common Questions

Q: Is the 26GB RAM real?

No, it's mostly a software trick. You get 6GB of physical RAM and 20GB of virtual 'expanded' memory that uses your storage. It's not the same as actual, fast RAM.

Q: Can I use this for drawing?

It has stylus support, but it's a basic capacitive stylus, not an active pen like an Apple Pencil. It's fine for doodles, but terrible for any real art or design work.

Q: How is the keyboard?

It's a cheap Bluetooth keyboard. It types, but the keys are mushy and travel is shallow. It's good for short emails, not for writing a novel.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this if you need a device for work, school, or anything important. If you're looking for a reliable tablet for reading, note-taking, or creative apps, this isn't it. Go find a used Samsung Galaxy Tab S6 Lite or an older iPad instead. They cost a bit more but won't die on you during a Zoom call.

Verdict

We can't fully recommend this for anyone who needs reliability. It's a classic 'you get what you pay for' scenario. If $120 is your absolute max and you need a tablet and a keyboard right now for basic web browsing and document typing, it'll work. For everyone else, save up a little more and buy a used device from a reputable brand. The risk of getting a glitchy unit, as some reviews mention, is just too high for us to call this a smart buy.