Review Tablets MUISOO

MUISOO MSOKB1001 Tablets - Review and opinions

MUISOO MSOKB1001
7.9 Overall

Quick recommendation

Value for money 8.2/10
Ease of use 7.8/10
Durability 6.9/10
Customer reviews 8.6/10

Is it worth it?

The MUISOO MSOKB1001 is a budget Android tablet aimed at people who mainly want a larger screen for streaming, browsing, reading and light everyday tasks without spending much. Its appeal is straightforward: a 10.4-inch class display, WiFi 6, expandable storage and a current Android build at an entry-level price, with the main trade-off being that this is still a basic media-first tablet rather than a true workhorse for demanding apps.

I’d look at this if your routine is Netflix, YouTube, web use, video calls, school basics or a second screen around the house. I’d skip it if you want dependable high-end responsiveness for heavier gaming or if occasional software roughness would annoy you, because the value story here is strongest when you treat it as an affordable everyday tablet, not a laptop replacement.

Screen size 10.4 inch
Resolution 1280 x 800 pixels
Chipset Penta-Core 1.8GHz CPU
RAM 20 GB
Storage 64 GB
Battery 5000 mAh

Key features

Screen and media fit

The 10.4-inch IPS screen, 16:9 aspect ratio and 1280 x 800 resolution place this tablet squarely in the watch-and-browse category rather than the premium reading category.

For films, YouTube and casual scrolling, that larger format is easy to enjoy. The compromise is simple: you get screen area and affordability, not razor-sharp detail.

Connectivity and convenience

WiFi 6, Bluetooth 5.4 and face unlock are useful quality-of-life features in a low-cost tablet because they affect the parts of ownership you notice every day.

Faster wireless behaviour, easier pairing and quick unlocking help the tablet feel less dated in normal home use, especially if it is shared between family members.

Storage flexibility

The core storage is 64GB, but microSD expansion up to 1TB changes the ownership experience more than the raw number suggests.

That matters if the tablet is going to hold downloaded video, children’s apps, offline files or a growing photo library. It is a practical advantage over similarly priced tablets that trap you in their base storage.

User experience

On the sofa with streaming, web browsing and casual app hopping, this tablet lands in the comfortable budget lane quickly. The 10.4-inch display and 1280 x 800 resolution work out to roughly 145 ppi, which is fine for YouTube, catch-up TV and general browsing at a normal viewing distance, even if text and fine detail will not look as crisp as on sharper mid-range tablets. The 16:9 shape also suits video well, so it makes more sense as a media screen than as a reading-first slate.

Move from one app to another, keep a browser open, jump into email or a streaming app, and the setup here is clearly tuned for light multitasking rather than heavy creation. Android 16, split-screen support, 64GB storage and microSD expansion up to 1TB make it easier to treat as a family or secondary device, especially if you download films or keep plenty of photos and apps locally. The catch is that the headline 20GB memory figure includes virtual RAM, so the real-world fit is everyday smoothness, not premium-class speed.

Around the house, the practical wins are easy to see. WiFi 6 and dual-band support suit modern routers, face unlock adds convenience for quick pick-up use, and the dual speakers matter more than many budget tablets admit because they make video and casual listening less dependent on headphones. The 5000mAh battery is paired with an advertised 8-hour battery life, which puts it in the right zone for a day of moderate use, but not in the class of tablets built for long travel days away from the charger.

For study basics and light work, it can cover document reading, browser research, messaging and simple split-screen use, but this is where the limits become clearer. There is no confirmed keyboard or stylus route to turn it into a serious productivity machine, and one complaint about glitchy behaviour means the smooth experience is not universal. If your day depends on polished multitasking and consistently clean app behaviour, stepping up to a more clearly positioned tablet makes more sense.

Pros

  • Strong value focus for streaming, browsing and everyday home use
  • WiFi 6, Bluetooth 5.4 and face unlock are generous features at this level
  • MicroSD expansion up to 1TB adds useful long-term flexibility
  • Dual speakers and 10.4-inch screen suit casual media well.

Cons

  • 1280 x 800 resolution is adequate rather than sharp by current tablet standards
  • The advertised 20GB RAM includes virtual memory, so expectations should stay in the light-use class
  • Battery capacity is fine for daily use but modest for longer travel or heavy all-day sessions
  • Software smoothness is not equally polished in every reported case.

Community

User reviews

The overall pattern is clear: people are buying this for value, screen comfort and easy everyday use, and most come away happy with streaming, browsing and battery life. The main disappointment is not the hardware concept but occasional reports of glitchy behaviour, so the safest expectation is a good budget tablet with some tolerance needed for entry-level rough edges.

Value

I’ve found it smooth for browsing, streaming and light work, and the screen is clear enough for Netflix and YouTube while still feeling like very good value.

Value

I’m impressed by the bright 10.4-inch display, smooth app switching and the way the speakers and battery make it easy to use for long daily sessions.

Value

I like that it feels light in the hand, connects to WiFi easily, charges fast and opens apps quickly, with loud speakers and a screen that looks good for the money.

Battery

I was disappointed because mine felt glitchy, sometimes got stuck opening pages and the screen orientation could change randomly in apps.

Comparison

Attribute MUISOO MSOKB1001 Current Whitedeer G13 Raemond K30 JVVQTB S3
Price 69.99 GBP 69.99 GBP 73.96 GBP 84.98 GBP
Screen size 10.4 inch 10.1 inches 10.1 inches 10.1 inches
Resolution 1280 x 800 pixels 1280 x 800 pixels 1280 x 800 pixels 1280 x 800 pixels
RAM 20 GB 30GB 6 GB installed, 18 GB stated with memory expansion 30GB RAM (8GB + 22GB expansion)
Storage 64 GB 128GB 128 GB 128GB
Battery 5000 mAh 6000mAh 6000 mAh 8000 mAh
Chipset Penta-Core 1.8GHz CPU Octa-core processor 2.0 GHz octa-core processor -
Editorial score 7.9/10 7.8/10 7.5/10 8.2/10

Against the Freeski UKA10L02, the MUISOO takes a very similar route: 10-inch class screen, 1280 x 800 resolution and a penta-core platform aimed at affordable daily use. The Freeski’s known 24GB RAM headline and slightly faster up-to-2.0GHz processor make it the better pick if you want the stronger paper spec story, while the MUISOO still makes sense if WiFi 6, Widevine L1 and the broader value package matter more to you than chasing the highest headline numbers.

Compared with the PRITOM M10 TF 512GB, the MUISOO is the easier recommendation for general media use. Both sit in the budget bracket, but the MUISOO’s newer Android version, far higher advertised memory figure, WiFi 6 and Bluetooth 5.4 give it a more modern everyday feel. The PRITOM route suits someone shopping on the simplest possible terms, while the MUISOO is the better fit if you want a cheap tablet that feels less stripped back.

The Laptok LAPK7 is the step-up alternative for buyers willing to move beyond the cheapest large-screen option. Its 11-inch size and higher editorial score make it the more appealing route if you want a roomier display and a stronger all-round impression, but the MUISOO remains easier to justify when the goal is simply low-cost streaming, browsing and family use without paying for more tablet than you need.

Conclusion and verdict

The MUISOO MSOKB1001 gets the basics right for the kind of buyer who wants an affordable Android tablet for the living room, travel bag or family table. Its strongest case is simple: a decent-sized IPS screen, modern wireless features, expandable storage, dual speakers and good everyday usability for a budget-friendly outlay. If the current offer is competitive, it is an easy model to shortlist for casual entertainment and light daily tasks.

The reason to pass is equally clear. If you are sensitive to occasional lag, want sharper resolution, or need a tablet that doubles convincingly as a study or work machine with more polished performance, this one sits too firmly in the entry-level bracket. My verdict is that it is a good-value media tablet, but not the right buy for anyone expecting premium smoothness from a low-cost slate.

FAQ

Is this tablet mainly for media or for serious work?

It is much better suited to streaming, browsing, reading and light study tasks than to demanding productivity, because the screen, battery and software features all point to a media-first budget tablet.

Is the storage enough for long-term use?

The built-in 64GB is modest, but support for microSD cards up to 1TB makes it far more practical if you plan to keep videos, apps or family files on the device.

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.