The Alldocube iPlay 70 SE has a measured footprint of 238.4 x 148.4 mm with a thickness of just 8 mm and a weight of 425 g, giving it a reasonably slim and light profile for a 10.1-inch tablet. It offers no water resistance rating and is not built to rugged standards, so it is intended for standard indoor use. The device does not include a stylus, a detachable keyboard, or a backlit keyboard, keeping the design focused on a straightforward slate form factor.
The iPlay 70 SE features a 10.1-inch IPS LCD touchscreen with a resolution of 1280 x 800 px at 220 ppi, paired with a 90 Hz refresh rate for smoother on-screen motion. The panel does not include branded damage-resistant glass, an anti-reflection coating, or sapphire glass protection. On the HDR front, the display supports neither HDR10, HDR10+, nor Dolby Vision, and it is a conventional LCD rather than an e-paper screen.
The tablet is driven by the Unisoc T310 SoC, a 12 nm chip with a quad-core CPU running one performance core at 2 GHz and three efficiency cores at 1.8 GHz using big.LITTLE technology, totalling 4 threads, alongside a PowerVR GE8300 GPU clocked at 800 MHz with turbo at the same speed and support for DirectX 10, OpenGL ES 3.2, and OpenCL 1.2. It comes with 3 GB of RAM running at 1333 MHz and 64 GB of eMMC 5.1 internal storage, which can be supplemented through the external memory slot. The SoC supports 64-bit processing and has integrated LTE built in, and the device ships with Android 15.
The rear camera offers a 5 MP CMOS sensor with touch autofocus, continuous autofocus during video recording, and a single LED flash with an accompanying video light, while video capture is limited to 720p at 30 fps. Manual controls include ISO, focus, exposure, and white balance, though manual shutter speed, HDR mode, panorama, slow-motion recording, burst mode, timelapse, and optical zoom are all absent. The sensor lacks back-side illumination and optical image stabilization, and HDR10 and Dolby Vision recording are not supported. On the front, a 2 MP camera is available for video calls and selfies, though it does not have its own flash.
The tablet includes stereo speakers and a 3.5 mm headphone jack for wired audio output, covering the basic listening needs of most users. There is no built-in radio. On the Bluetooth audio side, none of the advanced codecs are supported — aptX, aptX HD, aptX Low Latency, aptX Adaptive, aptX Lossless, and LDAC are all absent.
The Alldocube iPlay 70 SE houses a 5500 mAh rechargeable battery that supports fast charging, and a battery level indicator is available to keep track of remaining charge. The battery is not removable, and wireless charging is not supported.
Wireless connectivity covers Wi-Fi 4, 5, and 6 alongside Bluetooth 5.4, and the tablet accepts two SIM cards for cellular use, though 5G is not supported. Charging is handled via USB Type-C at 10W, with the USB port running at version 2.0, while HDMI output, NFC, and Ethernet are absent. Navigation relies on GPS with Galileo support, and onboard sensors include a gyroscope and accelerometer, though a compass and barometer are not present. On the software side, the device supports on-device machine learning, offline voice recognition, voice commands, split-screen multitasking, picture-in-picture, widgets, dark mode, dynamic theming, theme customization, media picker, full-page screenshots, customizable notifications, and a child lock. Privacy controls include location privacy options, camera and microphone access management, app tracking blocking, and clipboard warnings, though cross-site tracking blocking, Mail Privacy Protection, and Wi-Fi password sharing are not available. The tablet supports multiple user accounts, device position tracking, sharing intents, app offloading, battery health check, an extra dim mode, and the ability to play games while downloading, but it does not offer focus modes, Quick Start, direct OS vendor updates, a fingerprint scanner, 3D facial recognition, an iris scanner, or a built-in projector.
The device uses DDR4 memory.