URAO Tablet,10.1" Android 15 Tablet with Octa-core Review

The URAO tablet offers Android 15 and WiFi 6 for just $68, but its terrible screen holds it back from being a true bargain.

Cpu 2 GHz
Ram Gb 128
Storage Gb 128
Screen 10.1" 1280x800
Os Android 15
Stylus
Cellular
Battery Wh
URAO Tablet,10.1" Android 15 Tablet with Octa-core tablet
30 Overall Score

Overview

So you're looking at a 10-inch Android tablet for under $70, and you've probably got questions. Is the URAO tablet any good for basic stuff? Can it handle streaming and light games? Let's be real, at this price, you're not getting an iPad Pro. But what you do get is a surprisingly modern spec sheet: Android 15, a claimed octa-core processor, and a massive 24GB of RAM (though that's a bit of a technical trick, more on that later). It's a 10.1-inch device with an IPS screen, WiFi 6, and 128GB of storage you can expand. For students or anyone who just needs a cheap screen for videos and web browsing, it's worth a look.

Performance

Performance is where things get interesting. The specs say 24GB of RAM, which sounds insane, but it's actually 4GB of physical RAM plus 20GB of virtual RAM using storage space. That puts its real RAM in the 98th percentile for tablets, which helps with keeping apps open. The CPU and GPU, however, land in the 34th and 36th percentiles, respectively. That means basic tasks like browsing and YouTube will be fine, but don't expect smooth gameplay in anything more demanding than simple puzzle games. The benchmarks confirm it's a budget chip. It's good for getting rid of annoying lag on simple stuff, but it's not a powerhouse.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 34.3
GPU 35.6
RAM 97.5
Screen 6
Battery 49.5
Feature 48.4
Storage 45
Connectivity 61.9

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Incredibly low price for the feature list. 98th
  • Runs the latest Android 15 OS.
  • WiFi 6 support for faster, more stable connections.
  • Huge amount of usable RAM for multitasking basic apps.
  • Expandable storage up to 1TB with a microSD card.

Cons

  • The screen resolution is very low (1280x800), placing it in the bottom 6th percentile. 6th
  • Battery life is just average, rated for about 8 hours of mixed use. 34th
  • CPU and GPU performance are below average for tablets.
  • The 8MP rear camera is just for scanning documents, really.
  • It's heavy for a 10-inch tablet at 821 grams.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU 2 GHz
GPU Integrated ARM GPU

Memory & Storage

RAM 128 GB
Storage 128 GB

Display

Size 10.100000381469727"
Resolution 1280
Panel IPS

Connectivity

Wi-Fi WiFi 6

Physical

Weight 0.8 kg / 1.8 lbs
OS Android 15

Value & Pricing

At $68, the value proposition is simple: it's dirt cheap. You're paying for modern connectivity (WiFi 6, Bluetooth 5.0) and software (Android 15) wrapped around very budget hardware. For the price of a nice dinner, you get a functional tablet. The main alternatives at this price are older, refurbished name-brand tablets or other obscure Chinese models. If your budget is absolutely fixed under $100, this is a contender. If you can stretch to $200-$300, you'll find much better screens and performance from Samsung or Lenovo.

$68 Unavailable

vs Competition

Let's name names. Compared to an iPad Pro or a Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra, the URAO isn't even in the same league. Those are premium devices. A more fair comparison is against other budget Android tablets. The URAO's killer feature is its price and Android 15. Many cheap tablets are stuck on older Android versions. However, its terrible screen is a major weakness next to something like an Amazon Fire HD 10, which has a better display for a similar price but a locked-down OS. The Lenovo Legion Go is a gaming handheld, not a direct competitor. The Panasonic Toughbook is a rugged industrial device. For pure specs per dollar, the URAO stands out, but you sacrifice screen quality big time.

Verdict

Should you buy this? It depends entirely on your needs and budget. If you need a disposable tablet for a kid, a dedicated video streamer for the kitchen, or a super cheap second screen for reading PDFs and browsing the web, the URAO tablet makes a weird kind of sense. The performance is fine for those basic jobs. But if you care about screen quality for reading or watching movies, look elsewhere immediately. That low-resolution display is a deal-breaker for media consumption. For $68, you get what you pay for: a functional, modern, but fundamentally low-quality tablet.

Deal Tracker

$68 Unavailable