The Kindle Fire is quite an achievement at $200. It's a perfectly usable tablet that feels good in the hand and has a respectably good looking display up front.
Read the full review →Heads up! A newer version of this product is out!
Conclusion: We're mixed
Amazon deserves a lot of credit for coming up with the first sub-$200 tablet that may actually be worth buying. However, while the Kindle Fire does a great job of connecting to the Amazon media ecosystem, it's limited by a paltry 8GB of storage, a so-so web browser, and a poky processor. It's edged by Barnes & Noble's Nook Tablet, which offers expandable storage and a sharper display for the same price.
Critic reviews
sort by
The Kindle Fire is one of a kind, at least this week. It's the first affordable, easy-to-use general-purpose tablet. It doesn't replace the Apple iPad: It complements the iPad, which is bigger, more powerful, more expensive, and has far more apps.
Read the full review →If you like what Amazon Prime has going on in the kitchen, the Fire is a terrific seat. It's not as powerful or capable as an iPad, but it's also a sliver of the price—and that $200 will let you jack into the Prime catalog (and the rest of your media collection) easily and comfortably.
Read the full review →The Kindle Fire isn't an iPad killer, but it is a killer deal. At $199, it's really hard to beat the package Amazon has put together. Assuming you're willing to carry a smaller 7-inch device, it combines an easy-to-use interface and one-tap access to loads of content in a well-built design.
Read the full review →The Fire deserves to be a disruptive, gigantic force — it's a cross between a Kindle and an iPad, a more compact Internet and video viewer at a great price. But at the moment, it needs a lot more polish; if you're used to an iPad or "real" Android tablet, its software gremlins will drive you nuts.
Read the full review →In the world of tablets, there are great products and there are cheap products, but very few great, cheap products. ... for those of you unwilling to shell out $500 for an Apple iPad 2, and wary of buying a piece of junk, Amazon's $199 Kindle Fire tablet should be at the top of your wish list.
Read the full review →The best way to think of the Kindle Fire is as a decent e-reader that can do some extra stuff—namely, play videos and browse the Internet. For $200, that's not a bad deal—but just make sure that it's one you're willing to make.
Read the full review →iPad killer? No, the Kindle Fire is not. And it doesn't even match the iPad in web browsing, the one area in which its hardware should have sufficient performance to compete.
Read the full review →The Fire is a terrific media device, particularly for $199. Is it a halfway decent tablet computer as well? Mmm...probably not. Its user interface makes a clear statement about Amazon’s intentions. That said, it has a bunch of added features that makes it into much more than a reader.
Read the full review →You’ll have to pry the iPad 2 out of our cold dead hands, but we like the Kindle Fire enough to keep it around as an alternate option, which is more than we can say for almost all the other tablets we’ve used.
Read the full review →Now that it's approaching one year old, we struggle to recommend it over the new Google Nexus 7, which is a sexier tablet with a greater selection of apps, better screen and with greatly improved specs for the same price.
Read the full review →great for books, books with no pictures, but again just great. audio and video is good. flash sometimes works and the browser sometimes suck, together with flash. the display is just great, perfect rez and aspect ratio for this size. i can connect it to a computer through an USB cable, great and...
Read the full review →Great device, just could not find a use for it in my everyday life. If you want a good tablet and you are on a budget I recommend it.
Read the full review →The Fire is not a tablet, at least not in my opinion, but never the less it's a great device for $200. I have had 3 other tablets and this does not stack up, but if your an Amazon person, this is a useful device. As an Amazon person with a Prime Membership and a regular Kindle this device makes...
Read the full review →Only issue I have with the device is the lack of storage space. Gets a bti laggy on occasion but that's Android. Movies from Prime great on look great on the screen. Without a conection it is going to be a pretty subpar media device for video and maybe even music due to storage size.. Of course...
Read the full review →It does everything I want to do well. Reading books, streaming video, and catching up on news with the various apps. It lacks features in other tablets, but for the price and capability I can't ask for anything better. If you don't want or need the capabilities of an iPad but still need a tablet,...
Read the full review →I have friends and coworkers with various iPads. We have an iPad pilot project at work. The entry price for most of these items was well above that of their lowest MSRP quotes usually given in comparitive reviews. In the context of the Fire being a "version 1" and able to do 80% of the iPad for...
Read the full review →Use my Fire as my primary Kindle, rather than a tablet as I am particularly fond of my iPad2, however, after taking a dive from the roof of my car last week, the iPad2 is in the shop (thanks Square Trade), so I've been using the Fire for primary tablet duties for a week. Pros - - Size is nice...
Read the full review →I like many things with the Fire, however, anyone that has used WebOs, will feel the Fire is a bit clumsy. The carousel is maddening. The reader is ok, music acceptable. Some apps I've used can stand more development.
Read the full review →How it stacks up
Instantly compare the Amazon Kindle Fire side by side with some of the top devices on gdgt!
Compare these-
Amazon Kindle Fire 74 -
Apple iPad mini 93 from $329 -
ASUS Nexus 7 (Nexus Tablet) 88 from $223 -
Apple iPad 4th-gen 97 from $499 -
Apple iPad 2 92 from $399
Other Amazon tablets
-
Amazon Kindle Fire HD 7-inch 79 from $199 -
Amazon Kindle Fire HD 8.9-inch 79 from $269 -
Amazon Kindle Fire 2nd-gen 69 from $159
Don't forget to check out these other devices by Amazon, you might find something good!