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Amazon’s new $50 Fire tablet is one of the only Android tablets worth buying (AMZN)

Amazon's new Fire 7 tablet does everything a "normal" tablet should for just $50.

The Amazon Fire 7.

For the past few weeks I’ve been using the Amazon Fire 7, the slightly beefed-up sequel to the company’s most popular tablet. Just like its predecessor, it costs $50, and it works.

And that’s all you really need to know about it. The Fire 7 is not capital-g Good in any major aspect:

  • The 7-inch display isn't HD.
  • The design is unremarkable.
  • Performance is middling.
  • Amazon’s Fire OS skin is limited.
  • Expect to see advertisements on your lock screen by default.
  • You shouldn’t bother with the cameras.

Having said all of that, though, the Fire 7 is still a bargain. It’s $50! All of its shortcomings are real, but they rarely get so bad to make the whole thing unusable.

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The display is sufficiently bright; the design is light and sturdily put together; everything is strong enough to play games and browse the web without being actively frustrating. Its battery lasts about 8-9 hours on a charge, which is decent, and there’s a microSD slot for expanding the paltry 8GB of storage in there by default.

Amazon’s insistence on pushing its own services is obnoxious, no doubt, but its media-centric interface is at least easy to get around. If you are an Amazon user, it’s nice to have your Prime Video and Kindle books front and center (I could do without the shopping links, though). Amazon loads the device with strong parental controls, too.

And while the Alexa assistant certainly needs work, having it around is nice to for basic info and quickly checking the weather — even if it’s only accessible through the home button, not voice commands.

You need to set expectations appropriately with a device like this. The Fire 7 is a thing for reading books, streaming Netflix, playing a few games of “Candy Crush” or “Hearthstone,” and flipping through the web on the couch. Nothing more. In that light, it’s the definition of “fine.” But when you can get fine for $50, that’s value.

To be clear, there are other functional tablets at this price, but they often come from sketchier companies without Amazon's level of customer support.

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The Fire 7's bigger competition comes from Amazon itself: If you can spare another $30, the company's Fire HD 8 — with its higher-res screen, extra RAM, and bigger battery — is a much better buy.

Ordinary tablets like this have proven themselves to be inessential, though. If you just want something that does the job, for you or your kids, at the lowest price possible, the Fire 7 is really your only choice.

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