The Alldocube iPlay 70E has a footprint of 253 x 163.6 mm and a thickness of 7.6 mm, with an overall volume of 314.57 cm³. It weighs 475 g, placing it in a typical range for tablets of its screen size. The device does not include a stylus, a detachable keyboard, or a backlit keyboard, and it offers no water resistance rating. Tilt sensitivity is also absent, reflecting its straightforward, no-frills physical design.
The Alldocube iPlay 70E features a 10.95″ IPS LCD touchscreen with a resolution of 1200 x 1920 pixels and a pixel density of 207 ppi. It runs at a 90Hz refresh rate and includes an anti-reflection coating, which helps reduce glare under various lighting conditions. The display does not support HDR10, HDR10+, or Dolby Vision, and it lacks both branded damage-resistant glass and sapphire glass protection.
The iPlay 70E is powered by the Unisoc T7300 chipset, built on a 6nm process with an octa-core CPU arranged in a big.LITTLE configuration running at 2 x 2.2GHz and 6 x 2GHz across 8 threads. It comes with 8GB of RAM at 2133MHz and 128GB of internal storage, with an external memory slot available for further expansion. Graphics are handled by the Mali-G57 MP2 GPU clocked at 950MHz, supporting a single display, while maximum memory bandwidth reaches 17.07 GB/s. The SoC includes integrated LTE, integrated graphics, and ARM TrustZone security, supports 64-bit processing, and the tablet ships with Android 15.
The iPlay 70E carries a 5MP rear camera with a CMOS sensor capable of recording video at 720p and 30fps, alongside a matching 5MP front camera for video calls and self-portraits. The rear camera supports touch autofocus, continuous autofocus during recording, HDR mode, and offers manual controls for ISO, exposure, focus, and white balance, though it lacks optical zoom, optical image stabilization, and a BSI sensor. Neither a rear flash nor a front-facing LED flash is present, and features such as slow-motion recording, timelapse, burst mode, panorama, HDR10 recording, Dolby Vision recording, and 3D capture are not supported.
The iPlay 70E includes stereo speakers for built-in audio output, but does not offer a 3.5mm headphone jack or a built-in radio. On the wireless audio side, none of the advanced Bluetooth codecs are supported, including aptX, aptX HD, aptX Low Latency, aptX Adaptive, aptX Lossless, or LDAC, which limits high-quality wireless audio transmission to standard Bluetooth streaming only.
The iPlay 70E is equipped with a 7000mAh rechargeable battery that supports fast charging, and it includes a battery level indicator for monitoring charge status. The battery is non-removable and does not support wireless charging.
The iPlay 70E supports Wi-Fi 4 and Wi-Fi 5 along with Bluetooth 5.4, a USB Type-C port at USB 2.0 speed, and a cellular module with dual SIM support, though 5G is not available. It includes GPS with Galileo support, an accelerometer, a gyroscope, and a compass, while a barometer, NFC, HDMI output, Ethernet, and an infrared sensor are absent. On the software side, the tablet offers a range of privacy and usability features including location privacy options, camera and microphone access controls, clipboard warnings, app tracking blocking, on-device machine learning, offline voice recognition, and voice commands, though it does not support cross-site tracking blocking, Mail Privacy Protection, or direct OS vendor updates. Multitasking is covered through split-screen support, Picture-in-Picture, and the ability to play games while downloading, while additional conveniences include dark mode, dynamic theming, theme customization, full-page screenshots, a media picker, customizable notifications, an extra dim mode, app offloading, a child lock, battery health check, multi-user support, and widgets. Biometric security options such as a fingerprint scanner, iris scanner, and 3D facial recognition are not present, and Wi-Fi password sharing and Quick Start are also unavailable.