The Alldocube iPlay 60 Mini Turbo has a compact footprint, measuring 202.7 mm wide and 126 mm tall with a slim 7.9 mm thickness, while its 323 g weight keeps it light enough for extended handheld use. Its total volume comes in at approximately 201.77 cm³, reflecting its tightly engineered form factor. The tablet does not include a stylus, a detachable keyboard, or backlit keyboard support, and it offers no tilt sensitivity. It also carries no water resistance rating, so it is not designed to withstand exposure to moisture.
The Alldocube iPlay 60 Mini Turbo features an 8.4″ IPS LCD touchscreen with a resolution of 1920 x 1200 px, resulting in a pixel density of 270 ppi for reasonably sharp on-screen content. Typical brightness is rated at 320 nits, and the panel does not include an anti-reflection coating or branded damage-resistant glass such as Gorilla Glass, nor does it use sapphire glass. On the HDR side, the display supports neither HDR10, HDR10+, nor Dolby Vision, and it is a conventional LCD rather than an e-paper panel.
The tablet is driven by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 6 Gen 1, a 4 nm chipset with eight CPU threads arranged in a big.LITTLE and HMP configuration — four cores clocked at 2.2 GHz and four at 1.8 GHz — delivering Geekbench 6 scores of 943 single-core and 2748 multi-core. Graphics are handled by the integrated Adreno 710 GPU running at 800 MHz, with 128 shading units, support for DirectX 12, OpenGL ES 3.2, and OpenCL 2. The SoC includes integrated LTE and ARM TrustZone security, and operates within a 7W thermal design power envelope. The device ships with 8 GB of RAM running at 2750 MHz across two memory channels with a maximum bandwidth of 22 GB/s, and supports up to 12 GB total; cache is split across 256 KB L1, 2 MB L2, and 2 MB L3. Storage stands at 128 GB via eMMC 5.1, expandable through a memory card slot up to 512 GB. The system runs Android 14 and is fully 64-bit compatible.
The Alldocube iPlay 60 Mini Turbo features a 13 MP rear camera built on a CMOS sensor, paired with a 5 MP front camera for video calls and selfies. The main camera supports touch autofocus, continuous autofocus during video recording, and a range of manual controls including ISO, focus, white balance, and exposure, though manual shutter speed is not available. A single LED flash and a video light are present on the rear, while the front camera has no flash of its own. The rear camera offers no optical zoom and lacks a back-illuminated sensor, optical image stabilization, and HDR mode. On the video side, HDR10 and Dolby Vision recording are not supported, nor are slow-motion, timelapse, burst mode, panorama, or 360-degree shooting modes.
The audio capabilities of the Alldocube iPlay 60 Mini Turbo are notably limited. The tablet does not include a 3.5 mm headphone jack, so wired audio requires an adapter or USB-C solution. It also lacks stereo speakers, outputting sound through a single channel instead. On the wireless audio side, none of the advanced Bluetooth codec standards are supported — there is no aptX, aptX HD, aptX Low Latency, aptX Adaptive, aptX Lossless, or LDAC. Additionally, the device does not feature a built-in radio receiver.
The Alldocube iPlay 60 Mini Turbo is equipped with a 5500 mAh rechargeable battery that supports fast charging, allowing it to top up more quickly than standard charging methods. A battery level indicator is present so users can monitor remaining charge at a glance. The battery is non-removable and does not support wireless charging, meaning it can only be replenished via a wired connection.
The Alldocube iPlay 60 Mini Turbo connects wirelessly via Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac) and Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n) with download speeds up to 2900 Mbits/s and upload up to 900 Mbits/s, and pairs with accessories through Bluetooth 5.2. The tablet accepts two SIM cards but does not include an active cellular module or 5G support, and it lacks NFC, HDMI output, Ethernet, and an infrared sensor. For positioning, GPS, Galileo, a gyroscope, a compass, and an accelerometer are all present, while a barometer is not. USB Type-C handles wired connectivity, and device tracking is supported. On the software side, the tablet runs a multi-user system with a broad set of privacy and productivity features, including location privacy options, camera and microphone access controls, app tracking blocking, clipboard warnings, and on-device machine learning — though Mail Privacy Protection, cross-site tracking blocking, and direct OS vendor updates are absent. Usability features include split screen, Picture-in-Picture, full-page screenshots, a media picker, dark mode, dynamic and manual theme customization, customizable notifications, an extra dim mode, battery health check, child lock, widgets, sharing intents, voice commands, offline voice recognition, and the ability to play games while downloading. Focus modes, app offloading, Wi-Fi password sharing, and Quick Start are not available, and biometric security — whether fingerprint, iris scanner, or 3D facial recognition — is not included.
The Alldocube iPlay 60 Mini Turbo uses LPDDR5 memory, reflecting a relatively current generation of mobile RAM technology in terms of data transfer efficiency and power characteristics.