Skip to main content

Velocity Micro Taps Android for Cruz Trio of Tablets

Velocity Micro Cruz TabletWhen a company best known for its neon-bathed $4,000 gaming rigs steps into the market for tablet PCs, it’s unusual. When it plans to offer a kid-friendly version, it’s just downright weird. And when it starts prices at $150, well, that’s actually pretty cool.

Velocity Micro will step away from its luxury gaming throne to dabble in the emerging Android tablet market with the release of three new unusually inexpensive devices this summer: the Cruz Reader priced at $200, Cruz Tablet priced at $300, and Cruz StoryPad priced at $150.

All three devices will use 7-inch touch screens and run Google Android, although the StoryPad and reader both use screens with a 4:3 ratio, while the Tablet adopts a longer 16:9 aspect ratio. The Tablet will also be the only one of the three to get a capacitive screen, MOV, WMA and AVI playback, and 4GB of built-in storage. The entire line will accept SD cards, as well as play audio and video content.

Velocity Micro Cruz Reader in DockThe Reader, meanwhile, gets a unique speaker dock that also turns it into a photo frame, and the StoryPad has a durable drop-resistant design intended for kids. Velocity estimates the battery on the Reader should survive about six hours of reading, and the Tablet should deliver six hours of video, but gives no estimate for the StoryPad.

The Cruz Reader and StoryPad will appear this August, with the higher-powered Tablet to appear September 1. Check our Android tablet roundup for an overview of all the other Android tablets available and coming soon.

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Managing Editor, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team delivering definitive reviews, enlightening…
You should pay attention to TCL’s two new Android tablets
A close-up render of the TCL NXTPAPER 14 Pro tablet.

During CES 2024 in Las Vegas, TCL unveiled two new tablets: the TCL NxtPaper 14 Pro and Tab 10 NxtPaper 5G.

Both devices feature the company’s recently announced TCL NxtPaper 3.0 technology. This isn't the first time we've seen NxtPaper technology from TCL, but the 3.0 version has some pretty promising upgrades.
What's new with NxtPaper 3.0
TCL has improved its popular display technology with the release of TCL NxtPaper 3.0. This technology provides a full-color, paper-like experience while retaining the benefits of traditional LCD screens. The latest version has Circularly Polarized Light (CPL) screens, which mimic natural light’s “emission/reflection/refraction” path. This feature creates a visual experience similar to reading books under natural light, resulting in extra eye comfort and a more paper-like screen.

Read more
The OnePlus Pad is a lovely Android tablet with a surprising flaw
OnePlus Pad with keyboard case and stylus.

The OnePlus Pad is a story of what could have been if Android was better optimized for trackpads on keyboard accessories. That may sound like a small, niche complaint, but it's played a big role in my enjoyment (and frustration) with the tablet.

Using the OnePlus Pad can be glitchy and buggy at times, but despite its imperfect trackpad implementation (often resulting in me getting frustrated and wanting to move to my laptop for work), the tablet is surprisingly good for being your media consumption device.

Read more
I used AR glasses with Android tablets and iPads. Only one was good
Two pairs of AR glasses on top of an iPad and an Android tablet.

When Apple announced its overtly expensive Vision Pro AR headset, arguably its biggest promise had little to do with hardware. The company says “hundreds and thousands of iPhone and iPad apps" run well on Vision OS, and they will be ready to boot on the Vision Pro on launch day.

Apple made an ever bigger promise to developers. “By default, your iPad and/or iPhone apps will be published automatically on the App Store on Apple Vision Pro,” the company said. That’s akin to solving the biggest problem for an experimental class of hardware.

Read more