Review Tablets MUISOO

MUISOO Android 15 Tablet 10.4 inch Tablets - Review and opinions

MUISOO Android 15 Tablet 10.4 inch
7.9 Overall

Quick recommendation

Value for money 8.4/10
Ease of use 8.1/10
Durability 6.4/10
Customer reviews 8.8/10

Is it worth it?

The MUISOO Android 15 Tablet 10.4 inch is aimed at shoppers who want a low-cost big-screen tablet for streaming, browsing, schoolwork and light typing without buying accessories separately. Its biggest appeal is obvious: keyboard, stylus, mouse, case and earphones are all in the box. The real trade-off is that this is still a budget tablet with a modest 800 x 1332 display and basic cameras, so the bundle matters more than raw hardware muscle.

I’d look at this if you want a flexible everyday tablet that can cover sofa use, homework, emails and occasional desk work for roughly budget-tablet money. I’d skip it if you expect a true laptop replacement, sharper Full HD-class visuals, or battery behaviour that feels consistently premium. The value story is strong, but it works best when you buy it as a complete starter setup rather than as a performance-first tablet.

Screen size 10.4 inch
Resolution 800 x 1332 pixels
Chipset Penta-core processor up to 1.8 GHz
RAM 20 GB
Storage 64 GB
Battery 5000 mAh

Key features

Complete starter bundle

What changes the buying decision here is not just the tablet itself but the full package around it.

Keyboard, mouse, stylus, case, wired earphones, OTG adapter and charger are included.\n\nThat matters if you are buying for a student, a child moving up from a phone, or anyone who wants a ready-to-use setup on day one. It saves extra accessory shopping, though the included tools are best treated as convenience accessories rather than premium peripherals.

Screen and media fit

The 10.4-inch IPS panel gives this tablet its main everyday advantage: enough space for films, browsing, reading recipes, online lessons and split attention between apps.

Widevine L1 is a meaningful plus because it supports HD playback on compatible streaming services.\n\nThe catch is resolution. At 800 x 1332, the display is fine for general use and video, but it does not deliver the sharper finish that makes small text and detailed images look especially clean.

Storage and connectivity

You get 64 GB of internal storage and support for TF cards up to 1 TB, which is useful for downloaded films, school files, music and offline reading.

WiFi 6 and Bluetooth 5.4 also help this feel more current than many ultra-budget tablets.\n\nIn practice, that combination makes the tablet easier to live with over time. You are less boxed in by the base storage, and the wireless setup is better suited to modern routers, headphones and accessories than older bargain models.

User experience

On the sofa, this tablet makes the most sense as a casual media and browsing device with extras. The 10.4-inch screen gives you more room than a small 8-inch slate, and at roughly 151 ppi from the confirmed 800 x 1332 resolution, text and video are serviceable rather than especially crisp. That matters in daily use: streaming, web pages and reading are comfortable enough at normal distance, but anyone used to sharper panels will notice the lower pixel density quickly.

Move it to a desk and the bundle starts doing the heavy lifting. A keyboard, mouse, stylus, case and wired earphones in one box changes the first-week experience because you can go straight into emails, homework, note-taking and light document work without extra spending. For short writing sessions and school tasks, that is genuinely useful. The limit is equally clear: a 10.4-inch tablet with Android and an included keyboard can cover light productivity, but it does not turn into a full laptop substitute for long office days.

For everyday fluidity, the combination of Android 15, a 1.8 GHz penta-core processor and the advertised 20 GB RAM figure gives this tablet enough headroom for the kind of multitasking budget buyers usually care about: browser tabs, messaging, streaming apps and switching between simple work tools. The important detail is that part of that RAM figure comes from expansion technology rather than all being physical memory, so the practical win is smoother casual use, not premium-tier speed. If your routine is light gaming, video, study apps and web work, it fits the brief. If your routine is heavier creative work or demanding games, it is the wrong class of device.

Away from the charger, the 5000 mAh battery and 0.42 kg weight keep it portable enough for moving around the house or carrying in a bag for classes. The battery story is good rather than bulletproof: it suits a day of mixed casual use, but it is not the kind of tablet I would choose for long travel days where charging opportunities are uncertain. Add in the basic 5 MP front and 8 MP rear cameras, and the picture becomes clear: this is a practical everyday tablet with a strong accessory pack, not a premium travel or camera device.

Pros

  • Generous in-box bundle with keyboard, mouse, stylus, case and earphones
  • Good everyday value for browsing, streaming, study and light typing
  • Expandable storage up to 1 TB and modern wireless support with WiFi 6 and Bluetooth 5.4
  • Android 15 helps it feel current for mainstream app use.

Cons

  • 800 x 1332 resolution is adequate rather than sharp on a 10.4-inch screen
  • Cameras are basic and suited mainly to video calls and simple snapshots
  • Battery performance is not consistent enough to count as a long-endurance strength
  • One reported early failure tempers confidence in long-term durability.

Community

User reviews

Feedback around this tablet is strikingly consistent on three points: the package feels generous for the money, setup is easy, and the screen and day-to-day performance are good enough for browsing, streaming and study. The complaints are more focused, with battery consistency and one early defect report standing out as the main reasons not to treat it as a risk-free bargain.

Value

I found it fast and smooth for streaming and browsing, and the full accessory pack made it convenient straight out of the box.

Value

I was impressed by the clear screen, smooth performance and the way the keyboard, mouse, stylus and earphones made it feel like a mini laptop.

Value

I liked the fast stable WiFi, clear screen, good speakers and the way the keyboard and mouse helped with light work and studying.

Device

The battery disappointed me because it dropped within a day and never seemed to reach a full 100% charge.

Comparison

Attribute MUISOO Android 15 Tablet 10.4 inch Current Freeski UKA10L02 Whitedeer X108
Price 73.99 GBP 69.99 GBP 89.99 GBP
Screen size 10.4 inch 10 inches 10.1 inches
Resolution 800 x 1332 pixels 1280 x 800 pixels 1280 x 800
RAM 20 GB 24 GB 30GB (6GB physical + 24GB expansion)
Storage 64 GB 64 GB 128GB, expandable up to 2TB via microSD
Battery 5000 mAh - 6000mAh
Chipset Penta-core processor up to 1.8 GHz Penta-Core processor up to 2.0 GHz -
Editorial score 7.9/10 7.5/10 8.1/10

Against the Raemond K30, the MUISOO takes the more bundle-led route. The Raemond gives you a 10.1-inch 1280 x 800 display and a faster-sounding 2.0 GHz octa-core platform with 6 GB installed RAM, so it makes more sense if you care more about a sharper budget screen and a more conventional processor spec. The MUISOO is the better pick if the included keyboard, stylus, mouse and case would otherwise be separate purchases and you want a ready-made study kit.

The closer comparison is the MUISOO MSOKB1001 and the Freeski UKA10L02. Both alternatives step up to 1280 x 800 resolution, which is easier to recommend for reading and general clarity, and the Freeski also pushes to a 2.0 GHz penta-core chip with a larger advertised 24 GB RAM figure. This MUISOO Android 15 Tablet 10.4 inch still has a place if your priority is keeping spend low while getting the full accessory bundle and modern connectivity, but if screen sharpness is the first thing you notice, those higher-resolution routes are easier buys.

Conclusion and verdict

The MUISOO Android 15 Tablet 10.4 inch gets its appeal from practicality. You get a 10.4-inch Android 15 tablet, expandable storage, WiFi 6, Bluetooth 5.4 and a genuinely useful accessory bundle in one purchase, which makes it easy to recommend for students, casual home users and anyone shopping in the budget end of the market. If the current offer keeps it in that low-cost bracket, the value case is easy to understand.

The reason to pass is just as clear. If you care strongly about display sharpness, want dependable all-day battery confidence, or expect a tablet that can stand in for a proper laptop, this one lands too squarely in the budget lane. For light work and entertainment it makes sense; for demanding use or cleaner long-term buying confidence, I would move to a better-defined higher-resolution alternative.

FAQ

Is this tablet mainly for media or productivity?

It is best treated as a media and everyday-use tablet that can also handle light productivity because the included keyboard and stylus are useful, but the screen resolution and budget hardware keep it short of true laptop replacement territory.

Is the included keyboard enough to change the buying decision?

Yes, if you want a ready-to-use study or casual work setup without buying extras separately. No, if you need a premium typing experience for long daily sessions.

Alexandre Lefèvre

About the author

Alexandre Lefèvre

Tech enthusiast focused on testing and reviewing the latest devices. I share honest insights to help you choose the right products with confidence.