The Alldocube iPlay 70 measures 238.4 x 148.4mm with a thickness of just 8mm and a weight of 425g, giving it a reasonably slim and portable profile. Its volume comes in at 283.03cm³, reflecting a standard compact tablet footprint. The device does not include a stylus, detachable keyboard, or backlit keyboard, and it carries no water resistance rating. It also does not feature a rugged build, making it suited for everyday indoor use rather than harsh environments.
The Alldocube iPlay 70 features a 10.1″ IPS LCD touchscreen with a resolution of 1280 x 800 pixels and a pixel density of 220 ppi, delivering reasonably sharp visuals for its size. The panel runs at a 90Hz refresh rate, contributing to smoother scrolling and more fluid on-screen motion. The display does not include branded damage-resistant glass, an anti-reflection coating, or sapphire glass protection, and it does not support HDR10, HDR10+, or Dolby Vision for enhanced color and contrast rendering.
The Alldocube iPlay 70 is powered by an octa-core processor with 8 threads running at 2 x 1.75GHz and 6 x 1.5GHz, built on a 22nm process node and utilizing big.LITTLE architecture alongside Heterogeneous Multi-Processing for efficient workload distribution. It comes with 4GB of RAM and 128GB of internal storage, with an external memory slot available for additional capacity. The SoC integrates LTE, graphics with a GPU clocked at 819MHz, and supports 64-bit processing, NX bit security, and TrustZone for hardware-level protection. The tablet ships with Android 15 out of the box.
The Alldocube iPlay 70 includes a 5MP rear camera and a 5MP front camera, with the main shooter capable of recording video at 720p at 30fps using a CMOS sensor. The rear camera supports touch autofocus, continuous autofocus during video recording, a video light, and a single LED flash, while manual controls cover ISO, focus, exposure, and white balance. Optical zoom is not available, and the sensor does not feature back-side illumination. On the video side, slow-motion recording, HDR10, and Dolby Vision recording are not supported, nor are timelapse, burst mode, panorama, or 360-degree panorama shooting. The front camera does not have its own flash, and the rear flash is a standard single-LED unit without dual-tone or RGB variants.
The Alldocube iPlay 70 features stereo speakers and a 3.5mm headphone jack, offering two output options for audio playback. It does not include a built-in radio. On the wireless audio side, none of the high-quality Bluetooth codec standards are supported, including aptX, aptX HD, aptX Low Latency, aptX Adaptive, aptX Lossless, or LDAC.
The Alldocube iPlay 70 is equipped with a 6000mAh rechargeable battery that supports fast charging, allowing it to replenish power more quickly than standard charging. A battery level indicator is present to keep track of remaining charge. The battery is not removable, and wireless charging is not supported.
The Alldocube iPlay 70 supports Wi-Fi 4, Wi-Fi 5, and Wi-Fi 6 alongside Bluetooth 5.4, and includes a cellular module with dual SIM support, though 5G is not available. Wired connectivity is handled via a USB Type-C port running USB 2.0, while HDMI output and Ethernet are not present. For location, the tablet offers GPS with Galileo support, though it lacks a compass and barometer. Sensors include a gyroscope and accelerometer, but there is no NFC, fingerprint scanner, iris scanner, infrared sensor, or built-in projector. On the software side, the device runs an open-source platform and brings a broad set of features including dark mode, dynamic theming, split-screen multitasking, Picture-in-Picture, and multi-user support, along with widgets, customizable notifications, full-page screenshots, a media picker, offline voice recognition, voice commands, and the ability to play games while downloading. Privacy options cover location controls, camera and microphone access management, clipboard warnings, and app tracking blocking, though cross-site tracking blocking, Mail Privacy Protection, and Wi-Fi password sharing are not included. Direct OS vendor updates are not provided, and focus modes and Quick Start are also absent. Additional utilities include a battery health check, extra dim mode, app offloading, device tracking, and on-device machine learning, with a child lock available for supervised use.
The Alldocube iPlay 70 supports multithreading, allowing the processor to handle multiple threads simultaneously for more efficient task execution.