You can now get the Fire Kids Edition from Three for £15 per month with no upfront cost. The contract lasts two years (a total of £360) and comes with a portable MiFi device – a mobile Wi-Fi hotspot – so kids can get online when you’re in the car or anywhere in the UK with a mobile signal. The package includes 2GB of data per month. The extra storage also applies to the Kids Edition which costs £99.99. This includes a special bumper case in blue or pink, a year’s subscription to Fire for Kids and a two-year ‘worry free’ guarantee that covers accidental damage. The software is exactly the same, though, and you should consider buying the basic tablet as well as the Kids Edition. The only difference with the Kids Edition is that you’ll be asked to create at least one child’s account when you go through the initial setup process, and this will activate the free year’s subscription to Fire for Kids. You can jump straight to the Fire for Kids section.

The Fire HD 6 is available in a Kids Edition, too, but costs £119.99 yet lacks a microSD slot, so it’s impossible to recommend in the light of the newer models. If you do see this old model on sale, ignore it.

It’s hard to know exactly what that means, but if you want to you can buy extra warranty for the tablet that includes accidental damage for £14.99 for one year, £19.99 for two years or £29.99 for three years. Build quality doesn’t feel especially good. When you tap the back panel the tablet sounds hollow, and if you try to twist the whole thing, colours change on the screen. But that goes for most tablets: if you try to break them, they will break. The bezels around the screen are still a bit fat to make it look modern or stylish, but such things aren’t concerns when you’re spending this little. At 313g and 10.6mm thick it’s a bit podgy, too, even though it’s marginally lighter and smaller than previous generations.

The screen is an IPS panel, though. That means it’s instantly better than the majority of budget tablets (including virtually all kids’ tablets) which insist on using poor-quality TN screens. IPS means viewing angles are good, and that’s one of the most important aspects on a tablet. The low resolution of 1024×600 makes things look a bit blocky and fuzzy, but the interface has been designed around this and – in general – everything looks better than you’d expect. There are exceptions, such as when you’re faced with a terms and conditions screen with smallprint and tiny tickboxes. Colours are reasonable, as is brightness and contrast. Our main criticism is that the screen is sometimes unreponsive to touch. Whether this is a failing of the screen itself (the touch-sensitive layer) or the performance (see below) is unknown. But sometimes you tap multiple times before your gesture is acknowledged. The Fire is available in only one capacity: 8GB, but you can add up to 128GB by buying a microSD card. You can install apps on the memory card, but certain apps have to be installed on the internal storage. Of course, you can put movies, music, home videos and photos on the card to free up internal space. Costs are cut by using the basic versions of everything: the Wi-Fi is single-band 802.11n, and it’s a USB 2.0 port rather than anything newer. But few people need anything better, and most people won’t even notice. What you will notice is that the cameras are rubbish. The front camera has a paltry 640×480 resolution and is barely up to being used for Skype calls, and the rear camera produces smudgy photos and shaky, blurry videos. And that’s when there’s lots of light. With a quad-core 1.3GHz processor and 1GB of RAM we were never expecting great performance from the Fire. We could list a load of benchmark results here, but for most people thinking about buying this cheap tablet there’s only one question: is it fast enough? In general, it is. Sometimes it’s quicker than you’d expect, and the operating system – Fire OS 5 – feels slicker than some Android tablets costing twice as much. Apps load within a couple of seconds, and naturally even faster if they’re already running and you’re just switching back to them.

But the limited amount of RAM means you have to be careful not to run too many in the background as the Fire becomes sluggish and unresponsive when you max it out. The screen can take a while to rotate when you turn the tablet, so you turn it back and the screen rotates to the other position as you do. It’s no speed demon for games, either. But if you’re just crushing candy or playing other casual games, which covers virtually all kids games, it’s absolutely fine. (We’ve had no complaints from our eight-year-old tester who has been using the tablet for over six months.) One of the biggest improvements over previous generations of Fire tablets is the latest version of Fire OS, version 5, but referred to as Bellini. There’s logic here, since Fire OS is based on Android which uses friendly codenames as well as numbers. Bellini is based on Android Lollipop, and it shows much more than in the past. You get an almost standard Android notification / quick settings panel when you swipe down from the top of the screen and can swipe away notifications, adjust screen brightness and toggle Wi-Fi and Bluetooth on and off. Even the on-screen buttons at the bottom are the same as Android’s. The square icon brings up the standard Android app switcher where you can swipe away apps to close them.

You can also switch user accounts in the usual Android way, by tapping on the user’s photo (or icon) on the lock screen or from the notification panel. This is particularly good if you’re sharing the tablet with your kids, or buying one for them to share. You can set it so that when they switch to their account, the Fire for Kids app automatically opens. It lets you choose exactly which apps, books, games and more they can access in their individual account. While we’ve praised this mode before (it used to be called Freetime), it could still be improved. For example, it would be more intuitive to have a search option in each of the books, videos and apps sections. Note that there’s no web browser in this mode. If you want to grant access, you’ll need to set up a standard user account for them rather than a child’s. The benefit of using a child profile is that there’s excellent control over how much time (and when) they can use the tablet. You can set separate times for weekdays and weekends, as well as different time limits for watching videos, reading books and using apps. You can even set goals, such as 30 minutes of reading per day and – if you want to – block access to videos and apps until the goal has been met.

The main interface is also more Android like. Instead of the old carousel of recently used apps, you now swipe between homescreens which are divided into Home, Books, Video, Games, Shop, Apps, Music, Audiobooks and Newsstand. All your recently accessed stuff is off to the left of the Home screen. The downside is – as ever – no Google apps whatsoever. Want to use YouTube? You’ll have to do that via the web browser or use one of the many third-party apps (none of which we’ve found to be very good). You can set up your Gmail account to work with the E-mail, Calendar and Contacts apps, and you get separate apps for Photos and Home Videos. As long as you have a compatible cable (OTG) you can connect your digital camera and load photos straight onto the tablet.

The range of pre-installed apps is good, including a document viewer, world clock, calculator and more, but there’s no mapping app and you won’t find Google Maps in the store. One of the confusing thing about this tablet is that the Fire for Kids app is available on both the standard one and the ‘Kids Edition’. But on the standard tablet, you’ll have to pay separately to use it: it costs from £1.99 per month.

Some of the videos for older kids include Legend of Korra, Gortimer Gibbons, Thunderbirds Are Go, Lego Ninjago, iCarly, and Teen Titans Go! Apps and games (which contain no in-app purchases or ads) include Sonic the Hedgehog, Monument Valley, Slugterra: Dark Waters, Rayman Fiesta Run, Lightbot Programming Puzzles, Star Wars Rebels,  Temple Run: OZ, Barbie, Hot Wheels,  and Avengers Origins. Books for 9-12s include: Guinness World Records, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, iCarly, Dragonborn, Myth-O-Mania, Dennis the Menace and Gnasher, Harry Potter, and The Boy’s Book of Adventure

Jim has been testing and reviewing products for over 20 years. His main beats include VPN services and antivirus. He also covers smart home tech, mesh Wi-Fi and electric bikes.

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