The Blackview Mega 8 has a footprint of 302 x 197.5 mm with a slim profile of 7.85 mm and a weight of 736 g, giving it a total volume of around 468.21 cm³. The tablet does not include a stylus, a detachable keyboard, or backlit keyboard support, and it carries no water resistance rating. Its build is not ruggedized, and tilt sensitivity is absent as well.
The Blackview Mega 8 features a 13-inch IPS LCD touchscreen with a resolution of 1920 x 1200 px and a pixel density of 174 ppi, paired with a 90Hz refresh rate for smoother on-screen motion. An anti-reflection coating is present, though the display does not use branded damage-resistant glass or sapphire glass. HDR10, HDR10+, and Dolby Vision are not supported, and the panel is a conventional LCD rather than e-paper.
The Blackview Mega 8 is powered by the Unisoc T620 SoC, built on a 12 nm process with an octa-core CPU running at 8 x 1.9 GHz across 8 threads using big.LITTLE technology and a TDP of 10W. It pairs with 12GB of LPDDR4 RAM at 1866 MHz — the maximum supported — and a Mali-G57MC GPU clocked at 850 MHz with 32 shading units. Internal storage stands at 512GB via eMMC 5.1, and an external memory slot is available for further expansion. The chipset supports 64-bit operation and integrates LTE directly on the SoC. Geekbench 6 scores come in at 497 single-core and 1541 multi-core, and the tablet ships with Android 15.
The Blackview Mega 8 sports a dual rear camera system with a 50 MP and 2 MP configuration, backed by a CMOS sensor and capable of recording video at 1080p and 30 fps with slow-motion support. The rear setup includes a dual-LED flash, a video light, touch autofocus, continuous autofocus during recording, and a range of manual controls covering ISO, focus, exposure, and white balance, though manual shutter speed is not available. Optical zoom is absent, and neither OIS, a BSI sensor, HDR10 recording, Dolby Vision recording, burst mode, panorama, nor 3D capture are supported. On the front, a 13 MP camera with an f/2 aperture handles selfies and video calls, though it lacks a dedicated flash of its own.
The Blackview Mega 8 includes stereo speakers and a built-in radio, covering the basics for on-device audio output. However, it does not feature a 3.5 mm headphone jack, so wired headphones requiring that connection are not directly supported. On the wireless audio side, none of the advanced Bluetooth codecs are present — aptX, aptX HD, aptX Low Latency, aptX Adaptive, aptX Lossless, and LDAC are all absent.
The Blackview Mega 8 houses a 11000 mAh rechargeable battery with fast charging support and a battery level indicator. The battery is sealed and not user-removable, and wireless charging is not available.
The Blackview Mega 8 supports Wi-Fi 4 and Wi-Fi 5 along with Bluetooth 5, a cellular module with dual SIM capability, and download and upload speeds of up to 300 Mbits/s and 150 Mbits/s respectively, though 5G, NFC, HDMI output, and Ethernet are not available. It connects via USB Type-C 2.0 and supports Galileo satellite positioning, but GPS, a gyroscope, compass, barometer, and infrared sensor are all absent. On the software side, the tablet runs a multi-user system with a broad set of Android features including dark mode, dynamic theming, theme customization, split screen, Picture-in-Picture, full-page screenshots, widgets, media picker, customizable notifications, and the ability to play games while downloading. Privacy options include location controls, camera and microphone access management, clipboard warnings, and app tracking blocking, although cross-site tracking blocking, Mail Privacy Protection, and Wi-Fi password sharing are not present. Additional capabilities include on-device machine learning, offline voice recognition, voice commands, an accelerometer, device tracking, battery health check, an extra dim mode, app offloading, and a child lock, while focus modes, Quick Start, direct OS vendor updates, a fingerprint scanner, 3D facial recognition, and an iris scanner are not featured.
The Blackview Mega 8 uses DDR4 memory.