![]() ![]() The Amazon Fire Kids (1.4) is better, while the Kurio Xtreme 2 (3.6) is worse. The Epic scored 3.02 on our Delta-E test for color accuracy (where lower is better), which is near the average tablet score (3.0). ![]() The colors the LeapFrog Epic does show aren't particularly true to life, which isn't that uncommon for kids' tablets. The average tablet (99.6 percent) shows a lot more colors. It can produce 74.6 percent of the sRGB color spectrum, which is slightly above the Fire Kids (69 percent) and similar to the Xtreme 2 (74.6 percent). The display quality suffered with live-action clips like Taylor Swift's "Out Of the Woods" music video, which appeared dim and filled the screen with jagged edges that made it hard to see anything clearly.Īccording to our colorimeter, the Epic's display isn't particularly vibrant. Solid colors looked accurate but flat on the panel, which rendered Adventure Time's Jake and Prismo in accurate yellows and pinks. When I streamed video on the tablet's 1024 x 600-pixel display, I noticed good color, but poor detail. The Epic's display is not great, but it may suffice for young eyes. ![]() MORE: How to Use the iPad's Parental Controls Measuring 9 x 6.38 x 1.02 inches, the tablet is about as thin as the Fire Kids tablet (1 inch), and thicker than the Xtreme 2 (0.8 inches). Weighing 20.64 ounces, the LeapFrog Epic is heavier than both the Amazon Fire Kids Edition (14.3 ounces) and Kurio Xtreme 2 (12.8 ounces), and may be too heavy for some small children to hold for long periods.
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