Relndoo 2026 Android 15 Tablet, 10 inch Tablet with Review

The Relndoo tablet bundles a keyboard, mouse, and stylus for just $130, but its slow processor and misleading RAM specs make it a classic 'you get what you pay for' story.

Storage 256 GB
Screen 10"
OS Android 15
Stylus Yes
Cellular No
Relndoo 2026 Android 15 Tablet, 10 inch Tablet with tablet
33 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

A $130 complete bundle that's all about quantity over quality. Fine for watching videos and typing the occasional email, but don't expect it to be fast or feel premium.

Overview

Look, the Relndoo '2026' Android tablet is a bundle deal that's trying to be everything for $130. The one thing to know? It's a budget 2-in-1 that throws in a keyboard, mouse, and stylus to distract you from its very mid-tier performance. It runs on an aging Unisoc T606 chip and Android 15, which sounds fancy but in our database, that CPU lands in the 41st percentile. That means it's slower than most tablets out there. It's not a powerhouse, but for the price of a nice dinner, you get a complete kit.

Performance

Honestly, nothing surprised us. The performance is exactly what you'd expect from a budget chip: fine for basic web browsing and video streaming, but don't expect to smoothly run more than two apps at once. The '26GB RAM' claim is misleading marketing—it's 4GB of physical RAM and 22GB of virtual memory, which is just fancy talk for using your storage as slow RAM. In real use, that lands it in the 34th percentile for RAM performance. It gets the job done, but it's not winning any races.

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 36

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The bundle is insane value. Keyboard, mouse, case, and stylus for $130 is a steal. 77th
  • The 256GB base storage is generous and expandable, hitting the 74th percentile. 76th
  • Battery life is decent with that 8000mAh cell, good for a full day of light use.
  • Comes with Android 15 and Widevine L1 for HD streaming, which is nice for the price.

Cons

  • The Unisoc T606 processor is slow. It's in the bottom half of all tablets we've tested. 11th
  • The '26GB RAM' is mostly virtual. You only get 4GB of real RAM, which limits multitasking. 34th
  • The screen is just okay, scoring in the 32nd percentile. Don't expect vibrant colors or deep blacks.
  • Build quality feels cheap. The metal case is thin and the whole package has a plasticky vibe.

The Word on the Street

4.3/5 (28 reviews)
👍 Buyers are shocked at how much stuff comes in the box for such a low price.
👎 A common complaint is misleading ads, specifically about a missing kickstand on the case.
👎 Several users report unstable software with frequent crashes and forced reboots.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Memory & Storage

Storage 256 GB

Display

Size 10"

Features

Stylus Support Yes

Physical

Weight 1.4 kg / 3.1 lbs
OS Android 15

Value & Pricing

For $130, it's hard to complain. You're getting a functional tablet and a full accessory suite for the price of a standalone keyboard for other tablets. Is it a great tablet? No. But as a complete, ultra-budget package for very light tasks, it's worth the asking price. Just manage your expectations.

$130

vs Competition

Compared to an iPad or Galaxy Tab, it's not even a contest—those are in a different league. The real competition is other budget Android tablets. Against something like the N-one Android Tablet, the Relndoo wins on bundle value but might lose on pure software polish. If you can stretch your budget to a Lenovo Idea Tab Pro, you'll get a massively better screen and processor. But if your max is $150 and you need the keyboard now, this is your pick.

Common Questions

Q: Is the 26GB RAM real?

No, it's a marketing trick. You get 4GB of actual RAM. The other 22GB is 'virtual RAM' that uses your storage, which is much slower.

Q: Can I use this for drawing?

Not seriously. The included stylus is a basic capacitive stick, not an active pen with pressure sensitivity. It's for tapping, not art.

Q: Is this good for gaming?

No. The GPU is in the 43rd percentile. It'll run simple games, but anything 3D or demanding will chug and stutter.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for a responsive tablet for real work or a great screen for media, this isn't it. Go get a refurbished iPad or a last-gen Samsung Galaxy Tab instead. You'll spend a bit more, but you won't be fighting with lag.

Verdict

We recommend this only if your budget is absolutely locked at $130 and you need a keyboard included. It's a starter kit for students or as a secondary screen for recipes and videos. For anyone who needs performance, a good screen, or plans to use it daily for work, save up another $100 and get something better. This is a 'get by' device, not a 'thrive' device.