32-Inch Portable Smart Tablet, Portable TV on Review

This 32-inch Android tablet on wheels has a screen in the top 3% of all tablets. But with performance specs in the bottom half, it's a fascinating niche product with serious compromises.

Screen ?" 3840x2160
OS Android
Stylus No
Cellular No
32-Inch Portable Smart Tablet, Portable TV on tablet
26.8 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

It's a 32-inch 4K Android screen on wheels—a novelty that works for streaming. The screen is in the top 3% of all tablets. But with performance specs in the bottom half and terrible productivity scores, it's a one-trick pony. Buy it only if that one trick is all you need.

Overview

This is a 32-inch Android tablet on wheels. Let's start with the numbers that matter: that screen sits in the 97th percentile for its size and 4K resolution, which is genuinely impressive. But under the hood, it's a different story. The 8GB of RAM and 128GB of storage land in the 35th and 31st percentiles respectively, putting it well behind most premium tablets. It's a giant screen you can roll around your house, powered by a battery that's just average (49th percentile) and performance specs that are decidedly mid-pack.

Performance

Performance is a mixed bag, heavily defined by what you're doing. For entertainment, like streaming video, it scores a 36.5 out of 100 in our tests. That's okay, and the killer screen carries a lot of the weight. But try to do anything productive, and it falls apart, scoring a dismal 17.9 out of 100. The CPU and GPU are both in the mid-40s percentile-wise, so don't expect to game or multitask heavily. It's got WiFi 5, which is fine for streaming but again, just average (44th percentile). Think of it as a very large, mobile Netflix machine, not a workhorse.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 44.5
GPU 46.2
RAM 35.4
Screen 97.5
Battery 48.8
Feature 19.5
Storage 30.6
Connectivity 43.8
Social Proof 25.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • That 32-inch 4K screen is in the 97th percentile. It's huge and sharp, perfect for movies. 98th
  • The rolling stand and full swivel rotation make it incredibly flexible for viewing anywhere in a room.
  • A built-in battery rated for 5-8 hours means you're not always tethered to an outlet.
  • It runs full Android 13 with Google Play, so you can install any streaming app you want.

Cons

  • Productivity performance is abysmal, scoring only 17.9 out of 100. This is not a laptop replacement. 20th
  • With 8GB RAM and 128GB storage, it's in the bottom third of tablets (35th and 31st percentiles). 26th
  • The overall 'feature' score is low (20th percentile), meaning it lacks the polish and extra perks of established brands. 31th
  • Social proof metrics are weak (26th percentile), suggesting it's a niche product without widespread adoption or trust.

The Word on the Street

4.4/5 (13 reviews)
👍 Many buyers are pleasantly surprised by the screen quality and the practical utility of the rolling stand for flexible home viewing.
👍 Users who purchased it specifically as a portable TV for kitchens, bedrooms, or patios feel it delivers perfectly on that unique promise.
👎 There are reports of defective units and difficult return processes, highlighting potential quality control and customer service risks.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Resolution 3840 (4K UHD)

Connectivity

Wi-Fi WiFi 5
Cellular No

Physical

OS Android

Value & Pricing

At $590, the value proposition is entirely about the screen and mobility. You're paying a premium for the form factor—a rolling 32-inch Android display—because the internal specs are what you'd find in a tablet costing half as much. Compared to an iPad Pro or Galaxy Tab, you get a much bigger screen but significantly weaker performance and storage. It's a trade-off: maximum screen real estate for your dollar, but minimum computing power per dollar.

$590 Unavailable

vs Competition

Stack it up against the giants. An iPad Pro with the M4 chip will run circles around it in every performance metric, but you're stuck with a 13-inch screen. A Samsung Galaxy Tab S10+ offers a gorgeous 12.4-inch OLED, DeX for productivity, and top-tier specs, but again, it's not 32 inches. Even a Microsoft Surface Pro, as a full Windows device, obliterates it for productivity. This Yezrow wins on screen size and unique mobility, but loses badly on raw power, ecosystem, and resale value. The Lenovo Idea Tab Pro offers a bigger screen than most at 12.7 inches for less money, with better specs. This is for someone who values the giant, movable screen above all else.

Spec 32-Inch Portable Smart Tablet, Portable TV on Apple iPad Pro Apple - 13-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” - Lenovo Lenovo - Idea Tab Pro - 12.7" 3K Tablet - 8GB RAM HP GPD Win MAX 2 2025 Handheld Gaming PC with AMD
CPU Apple M5 Mediatek MT6989 Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus X1P-64-100 MediaTek Dimensity AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370
RAM (GB) 12 12 16 8 32
Storage (GB) 256 256 512 256 2048
Screen ?" 3840x2160 13" 2752x2064 12.4" 2800x1752 13" 2880x1920 12.7" 2944x1840 10.1" 1920x1200
OS Android iPadOS Android 14 Windows 11 Home Android 14 Windows 11 Home
Stylus false true true false true false
Cellular false false false false false false

Common Questions

Q: Can I use this for video calls or as a smart home dashboard?

Yes, it runs full Android 13, so you can install Zoom, Google Meet, or any smart home app. Just know the front-facing camera quality isn't highlighted in the specs, and the CPU is only in the 44th percentile, so don't expect buttery-smooth performance with multiple apps.

Q: How does the battery life hold up in real use?

The battery scores in the 49th percentile—smack in the middle of the pack. The claimed 5-8 hours is probably accurate for video streaming at medium brightness. It's not a standout, but it should get you through a movie night unplugged.

Q: Is 128GB of storage enough?

It depends. For just streaming apps, it's fine. But 128GB puts it in the 31st percentile for tablet storage, meaning most tablets have more. If you plan to download lots of movies for offline use or install large games, you'll fill it up fast and there's no mention of expandable storage.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this if you need a tablet for anything more than casual streaming and web browsing. Its productivity score of 17.9 out of 100 is a glaring red flag. Students, remote workers, or anyone wanting to edit documents, handle multitasking, or use creative apps should look at an iPad, Surface, or Galaxy Tab instead. You'll get far better performance for your $590.

Verdict

We can only recommend this if your sole need is a massive, portable screen for passive entertainment like streaming in various rooms. The 97th percentile screen is its one and only superstar feature. For anyone even thinking about productivity, web browsing beyond a single app, or future-proofing, the weak internal specs (bottom-third storage, mid-pack CPU) make it a poor choice. It's a fascinating niche product, not a general-purpose tablet.