
It's an exciting time to be in love in with tech—be it the frenetic pace of AI, the myriad uses of gadgets, and how technology is changing everyday life. As a tech journalist, I believe tech and gadgets have the potential to solve all of the world's problems if used holistically, and my job is make to it more relatable and understandable.
For years, tablets were bought with hesitation. You wanted one, but you weren’t always sure why. In 2025, that uncertainty has faded. Tablets have stopped trying to replace laptops or compete with phones. Instead, they’ve settled into something quieter and more useful. People buy tablets now because they fit into routines - long workdays that spill into evenings, lectures that need note-taking without distraction and travel days where a phone feels too small and a laptop feels like effort. The best tablets of 2025 succeed because they understand these moments.
At the top end, Samsung continues to treat tablets seriously. The Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra is unapologetically large and expensive. Its screen is built for people who spend hours reading, sketching, editing, or watching content. With S Pen support and DeX, it makes a convincing case for those who want a tablet that can take on structured work. It is not subtle, and it is not meant to be.
OnePlus takes a more measured approach with the OnePlus Pad 3. It delivers strong performance and a large, smooth display without leaning too hard into the “laptop replacement” idea. This tablet feels designed for people who multitask often but still want simplicity. It handles work, media, and casual use without constantly reminding you of its power.
This is where most buyers in India are likely to land. Samsung’s Galaxy Tab S10 FE models keep the experience familiar while trimming the excess. The displays are good, battery life is dependable, and performance is steady across everyday tasks. These tablets do not chase attention. They focus on being reliable, which is often more valuable.
Xiaomi’s Pad 7 follows a similar philosophy. It does not promise more than it can deliver. The screen is sharp, the battery lasts comfortably through a day, and performance is enough for streaming, browsing, and light productivity. For students and families, this balance matters more than raw benchmarks.
Not everyone needs power or polish. Lenovo’s simpler tablets still make a lot of sense for people who just want a reliable screen. The Lenovo Tab Plus and Tab M11 are good examples. They are not built to impress on spec sheets, but they handle reading, video calls, online classes, and streaming without getting in the way. Battery life is steady, the displays are comfortable for long use, and nothing feels fragile or rushed. Even at the lower end, these tablets no longer feel like stopgap devices you replace every year. Move a step up and the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro adds pen support and better performance, useful for notes or light creative work, without pushing into premium pricing. These tablets just fit into daily life, which is often exactly what people want.
The tablet market in 2025 is not about chasing the most expensive option. It is about choosing one that fits into your day easily. Bigger screens are useful only if you use them. Faster processors matter only if your work needs them. In India especially, tablets are becoming personal devices again - something you pick up because it makes certain parts of your day easier. When a tablet does that without trying too hard, it feels worth buying.
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