Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Tablets
  3. Mobile
  4. Legacy Archives

Velocity Micro Taps Android for Cruz Trio of Tablets

Add as a preferred source on Google

Velocity Micro Cruz TabletWhen a company best known for its neon-bathed $4,000 gaming rigs steps into the market for tablet PCs, it’s unusual. When it plans to offer a kid-friendly version, it’s just downright weird. And when it starts prices at $150, well, that’s actually pretty cool.

Velocity Micro will step away from its luxury gaming throne to dabble in the emerging Android tablet market with the release of three new unusually inexpensive devices this summer: the Cruz Reader priced at $200, Cruz Tablet priced at $300, and Cruz StoryPad priced at $150.

Recommended Videos

All three devices will use 7-inch touch screens and run Google Android, although the StoryPad and reader both use screens with a 4:3 ratio, while the Tablet adopts a longer 16:9 aspect ratio. The Tablet will also be the only one of the three to get a capacitive screen, MOV, WMA and AVI playback, and 4GB of built-in storage. The entire line will accept SD cards, as well as play audio and video content.

Velocity Micro Cruz Reader in DockThe Reader, meanwhile, gets a unique speaker dock that also turns it into a photo frame, and the StoryPad has a durable drop-resistant design intended for kids. Velocity estimates the battery on the Reader should survive about six hours of reading, and the Tablet should deliver six hours of video, but gives no estimate for the StoryPad.

The Cruz Reader and StoryPad will appear this August, with the higher-powered Tablet to appear September 1. Check our Android tablet roundup for an overview of all the other Android tablets available and coming soon.

Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Editor in Chief, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team covering every gadget under the sun, along with…
Apple’s foldable iPad could meet the same fate as Microsoft’s doomed Surface Neo
The foldable iPad could stay an experiment, not a product
iPads with iPadOS 16.

Apple is exploring a massive foldable iPad, but this could be one of those projects that looks better on a roadmap than in a retail box.

According to a new report from Bloomberg, Apple has been working on a roughly 20-inch foldable iPad, a project that has reportedly been a priority for incoming CEO John Ternus. While it sounds like one of the company's most ambitious hardware bets in years on paper, it may never really hit the store shelves.

Read more
Next iPad could ditch traditional naming as Apple rethinks its lineup
Apple could make choosing an iPad less confusing for you
Home screen of iPad running iPadOS 26.

A subtle but potentially significant shift may be coming to the iPad lineup, and it has less to do with hardware and more to do with identity. In a recent interview with John Ternus and Greg Joswiak from Tom’s Guide, the company could rethink how it names future iPads - moving away from the familiar generation-based system.

A Naming Reset That Signals A Bigger Strategy Shift

Read more
Why I chose the Supernote Nomad over other e-ink tablets
The Supernote Nomad is the e-ink tablet I did not know I needed, and now I cannot put it down.
Supernote Nomad in hand

Supernote Nomad has become my favorite purchase of the last year, and believe me, the decision to buy it was not easy. I didn’t realize that the e-ink tablet landscape had become so vast, and all the tablets I looked at had at least a few compromises that were a deal breaker for me. 

Finally, after comparing and cutting out at least half a dozen e-ink tablets from my list, I settled on the Supernote Nomad. Yes, it also has some drawbacks, but there were five main reasons I settled on it. 

Read more