Review Tablets PRITOM

PRITOM M10 TF 512GB Tablet - Review and opinions

PRITOM M10 TF 512GB
6.5 Overall

Quick recommendation

Value for money 7.1/10
Ease of use 6.3/10
Durability 5.4/10
Customer reviews 7.0/10

Is it worth it?

The PRITOM M10 TF is aimed at the buyer who wants a big 10-inch screen, basic Android apps, expandable storage and even 3G calling without spending much. Its appeal is simple enough: a low-cost tablet for streaming, reading, web browsing and light family use, with the trade-off that the hardware is modest and the mobile calling side is the part that most clearly weakens the package.

I would look at this as a budget home tablet first and a phone-tablet second. It makes sense for casual video, reading, children’s apps and light everyday tasks, but it is not the right pick if you need dependable SIM use, smoother multitasking or a study-focused tablet with keyboard or stylus ambitions.

Screen size 10 inch
Resolution 1280 x 800
Chipset Quad Core
RAM 2 GB
Storage 64 GB
Battery 5000 mAh

Key features

Display comfort over outright sharpness

The 10-inch IPS panel and 16:10 format are the most convincing part of the package for everyday use. Video, browsing and children’s content benefit from the larger canvas, and the eye comfort and reading modes add a practical touch for evening use or lighter reading sessions.

What matters is the balance. You get a roomy screen at a low entry point, but 1280 x 800 is still a basic resolution on a panel this size, so the tablet feels more at home with streaming and casual apps than with detailed document work or prolonged small-text reading.

Built for light Android tasks

This configuration gives you 64 GB of storage, a quad-core processor and 2 GB of RAM, which places the M10 TF in the simple-use category rather than the multitasking one. It is better suited to web browsing, music, video and lightweight apps than to split-screen work, demanding games or keeping many apps open at once.

The expandable storage support up to 512 GB helps more than the memory does. If your library is mostly offline videos, photos, ebooks or children’s content, the microSD route extends the tablet’s life more effectively than the base hardware suggests.

Connectivity is the deciding caveat

Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS, USB-C and SIM support make this look versatile on paper, and for a fixed home role that versatility still has value. It can sit in the kitchen, living room or child’s room and cover the basics without much setup drama.

The catch is that the mobile side changes the risk profile. If you are buying this mainly because it can take a SIM and handle 3G calls, the attraction drops quickly. If you are buying it as an inexpensive Wi-Fi tablet and treating mobile calling as a bonus rather than a requirement, the overall fit is much easier to defend.

User experience

On the sofa, this is the kind of tablet that puts its value case front and centre. A 10-inch IPS display with a 1280 x 800 resolution and 16:10 shape gives you enough room for films, YouTube, web pages and ebooks without feeling cramped, and that works out at roughly 149 ppi, which is acceptable for casual viewing at normal tablet distance. The upside is comfort and screen area for very little money. The compromise is sharpness: text and fine detail will not look as crisp as on stronger mid-range tablets, so this suits relaxed viewing better than long, dense reading sessions.

Move from one simple app to another and the limits become clearer. With 2 GB of RAM and a quad-core platform, this sits firmly in the light-use lane: streaming, messaging, music, children’s learning apps and basic browsing are the natural fit. That can be perfectly workable if you keep expectations in check, but once several tabs, heavier apps or frequent app switching enter the picture, this stops feeling like a productivity tablet and starts feeling like a budget media slate with a short comfort zone.

Away from Wi-Fi, the buying decision becomes much sharper. The promise of 3G calls, SIM support, GPS and Bluetooth sounds useful for travel or as a child’s all-in-one device, yet this is also where the route narrows. If mobile connectivity is central to your purchase, this is not the clearest bet. For buyers who will mostly stay on Wi-Fi at home, that concern matters far less, and the USB-C charging, expandable storage up to 512 GB and basic camera setup make more sense as convenience extras than headline reasons to buy.

Pros

  • Large 10-inch display is well suited to streaming, browsing and family use.
  • 64 GB storage plus microSD expansion up to 512 GB is useful at this end of the market.
  • USB-C, Bluetooth, GPS and Wi-Fi give it a practical everyday feature set.
  • Can make sense as a low-cost home tablet for light Android tasks.

Cons

  • 2 GB RAM limits multitasking and heavier apps.
  • SIM and mobile connectivity are the biggest buying risk on this model.
  • Battery and charging consistency are recurring weak spots.
  • Screen resolution is basic for a 10-inch panel.

Community

User reviews

Opinion around this tablet follows a familiar budget-tablet pattern: people who keep the job simple often find it decent for the money, while disappointment rises fast when expectations move to battery consistency, charging reliability or SIM-based use.

Visit

I found it a waste of money because the SIM card did not work.

Amazon

Mine kept dropping Wi-Fi and then would not charge past 60 percent even after hours on charge.

Faith

I am very pleased with it and found it easy to use.

Jools

So far it has been great for the price, though the battery has been the weak point for me.

Comparison

Against a Fire HD-style budget tablet route, the PRITOM’s attraction is flexibility. Android with Google services, SIM support, GPS and expandable storage make it a broader device on paper than a tightly controlled media tablet. Choose the PRITOM if you want openness and extra connectivity on a strict budget. Choose the Amazon-style route if your priority is a more established media ecosystem and you do not care about mobile calling.

Against an entry-level Samsung Galaxy Tab A-family tablet, the difference is less about headline size and more about confidence. The PRITOM wins on low-cost screen area and the idea of phone-tablet versatility, but the Samsung route is the safer one for buyers who care about smoother day-to-day polish, clearer positioning and fewer compromises around basic reliability. The PRITOM works best when price and expandable storage matter more than refinement.

Conclusion and verdict

The PRITOM M10 TF 512GB makes the most sense as a large-screen value tablet for simple jobs. If you want an inexpensive 10-inch Android device for video, web browsing, ebooks, children’s apps and general home use, it covers the basics, and the expandable storage plus USB-C help its everyday practicality. Check the current offer, because its value case depends heavily on staying in the low-budget bracket.

I would skip it if dependable SIM use, stronger battery confidence or smoother multitasking are central to your purchase. This is not the tablet to stretch into a work device or a reliable phone replacement. Buy it for affordable screen space and light duties, or move to a clearer mid-range alternative if you need fewer compromises.

FAQ

Is this tablet mainly for media or productivity?

It is much better suited to media, browsing, reading and light family use than to study-heavy or multitasking work.

Is the SIM feature a good reason to buy it?

Only if mobile calling is a bonus, not the main reason, because that is the area with the clearest downside.

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.