CUPEISI Tablet Android 15, 10 inch 12GB RAM+64GB ROM/1TB Review

A $60 tablet that comes with a keyboard, mouse, and stylus sounds like a steal. But our testing reveals major performance compromises you need to know about.

CPU 1.8 GHz
RAM 4 GB
Storage 64 GB
Screen 10"
OS Android 15
Stylus Yes
Cellular No
CUPEISI Tablet Android 15, 10 inch 12GB RAM+64GB ROM/1TB tablet
36.1 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

It's a $60 bundle with a keyboard, mouse, and case, but the tablet inside is slow. The '12GB RAM' is really 4GB, and the CPU ranks in the bottom 20%. Only buy if you need the accessories on a shoestring budget and have zero performance expectations.

Overview

The CUPEISI Tablet Android 15 is a $60 2-in-1 that tries to be everything. It comes with a keyboard, mouse, and stylus, promising a laptop experience on a budget. On paper, it's loaded: Android 15, Wi-Fi 6, and a claim of 12GB RAM. But our data shows a big gap between the marketing and the reality.

Performance

Let's be real: the performance is basic. The 1.8GHz quad-core CPU lands in the 16th percentile, which means it's slower than most tablets we track. The '12GB RAM' is actually 4GB physical, with 8GB of virtual expansion tech—a common trick in budget devices. It's fine for light web browsing, email, and maybe a streaming app. But try to multitask or run anything demanding, and you'll feel the lag. The GPU score is in the 20th percentile, so gaming is basically off the table.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 16.6
GPU 20.3
RAM 35.5
Screen 56
Battery 48.8
Feature 93.2
Storage 30.6
Connectivity 74.7
Social Proof 57

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The $60 price includes a keyboard, mouse, and case. 93th
  • Wi-Fi 6 connectivity is surprisingly good for the cost. 75th
  • The Android 15 OS is up-to-date.
  • MicroSD expansion up to 1TB helps the small 64GB storage.

Cons

  • The advertised 12GB RAM is misleading; real RAM is just 4GB. 17th
  • CPU performance is very slow, ranking in the bottom 20%. 20th
  • The 6-hour battery life is mediocre and drains on standby. 31th
  • The 1280x800 screen resolution is low for a 10-inch panel.

The Word on the Street

3.9/5 (1615 reviews)
👍 Many buyers are pleasantly surprised it includes a full set of accessories (keyboard, mouse, case) for such a low price.
👎 A frequent complaint is the battery doesn't hold a charge overnight, requiring a recharge before morning use.
🤔 Users find it adequate for basic tasks like YouTube and web browsing, but note the keyboard can be glitchy and performance is limited.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU 1.8 GHz

Memory & Storage

RAM 4 GB
Storage 64 GB

Display

Size 10"
Panel IPS

Connectivity

Wi-Fi WiFi 6

Features

Stylus Support Yes

Physical

Weight 1.2 kg / 2.7 lbs
OS Android 15

Value & Pricing

For $60, you get a lot of accessories in the box. That's the main value proposition. As a standalone tablet, it's a very basic media viewer and web browser. As a 'laptop,' it's a compromised experience for typing emails or notes. You're paying for the bundle, not the power. If your budget is absolutely locked at $60 and you need all those accessories right now, it's an option. Otherwise, saving a bit more opens up much better choices.

$60

vs Competition

Stacked against the competition, this tablet lives in a different universe. An iPad or Galaxy Tab S10 will run circles around it in speed, screen quality, and app support, but they cost 10x more. A closer budget rival might be an older Amazon Fire tablet, which has a better ecosystem but a worse OS. The Lenovo Idea Tab or used older Samsung tablets in the $100-$150 range offer a significantly better experience without the performance compromises. This CUPEISI tablet wins on initial accessory count but loses on every performance metric.

Common Questions

Q: Is the RAM really 12GB?

No, it has 4GB of physical RAM. The '12GB' uses virtual expansion technology, which is much slower and not the same as real, dedicated memory.

Q: Can it run games or design apps?

Not really. Its GPU performance is in the 20th percentile, so it struggles with anything graphically intensive. It's best for streaming, web browsing, and very light apps.

Q: How long does the battery last?

The manufacturer claims about 6 hours of regular use. User reports confirm this, but also note significant battery drain even when the tablet is asleep, so you might need to charge it daily.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this if you need a responsive tablet for anything beyond the basics. Students needing reliable note-taking, artists, or anyone who gets annoyed by lag should look elsewhere. The performance scores are just too low for real work. If you need a tablet that feels fast, even a used older model from a major brand is a smarter buy.

Verdict

Buy this only if your primary need is the absolute cheapest possible way to get a typing accessory bundle for light, casual use. It's for someone who needs a keyboard for emails and a screen for YouTube, and who won't be frustrated by slow performance or standby battery drain. Think of it as a disposable accessory hub, not a real computer.