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Fire tablets have always been about stretching value, and the Amazon Fire Max 11 takes that idea further. It’s the biggest and most powerful tablet Amazon has made so far, but it stays well under the typical premium tablet price tag. Right now, a refurbished, like-new 64GB model with ads is down to $124.99 from $199.99 as an early Black Friday deal. Meaning, you’re basically getting a refreshed unit that looks new, works flawlessly, and costs a lot less. (For $65 more, you can get the 128GB version brand new and ad-free.) It came out last summer and earned PCMag’s Best Budget Tablet of the Year 2024—a solid endorsement for a device that’s meant to balance everyday use, streaming, and light work.
The 11-inch LCD is the largest in Amazon’s Fire lineup, offering a 2,000 x 1,200 resolution and 213 pixels per inch, making it sharp enough for reading, streaming, and casual sketching with the optional $29.99 stylus. It’s not as vibrant as an iPad, but it’s bright and crisp for the price, notes this PCMag review. The aluminum body gives it a sturdier, more polished feel than the plastic Fire models of the past, and the stereo speakers hold up surprisingly well for music and movies. There’s no headphone jack, which feels like an oversight, but Bluetooth 5.3 makes up for it with a stable connection for wireless headsets. Performance-wise, the octa-core processor, 4GB RAM, and the 64GB of internal storage (expandable up to 1TB via a microSD card) handle browsing, multitasking, and light gaming without much slowdown.
What do you think so far?
Still, there are trade-offs. It runs FireOS 8, Amazon’s custom version of Android, which prioritizes Kindle, Prime Video, and Alexa over Google’s suite of services. It’s perfect if you’re already deep in Amazon’s ecosystem, but if you depend on Gmail, Maps, or Play Store apps, you’ll need to manually sideload them. The dual 8MP cameras perform fine for video calls and scanning, but that’s about it. Battery life realistically lasts around nine to 10 hours of typical use, and it charges over USB-C, though the included 9W charger feels slow compared to the 15W it supports.
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