![]() ![]() The little kids' version has a cute pattern on the back and an even more formidable kickstand. Instead, set up a kid's profile and add your hand-selected books to it. If you really want to be the master curator, Kids+ isn't your service. If you don't like commercial tie-in books and only want the classics, too bad you can't filter the Disney out. (Our Fire HD 10 review explains why so many popular apps are unavailable on Amazon's tablets.) Speaking of comics, the Comixology and Overdrive library apps are in Amazon's Appstore, but Marvel Unlimited and DC Universe are not. ![]() When you get to middle-grade books, you'll find series such as Harry Potter, Warriors, and Wimpy Kid a lot of Rick Riordan and some Marvel Comics trade paperbacks. Someone on Amazon's content curation team has made real effort to supply recent books with Asian American and Black protagonists. There's a ton of Disney-branded tie-in books as well as popular series such as Bad Kitty, Big Nate, and Pete the Cat. You'll find a lot of well-known, high-quality brands. The experience of browsing Amazon Kids+ is a lot like hanging out in the children's section of your local library, except you don't need to worry about overdue fees. The big kids' version has a protective case, but it tries not to appear so toy-like. Amazon Kids+ runs on any Android tablet or iPad, and with the Kids or Kids Pro device, you get a year of it for free. You can also lock out content by type, blocking videos, apps, or web browsing.īeyond that, you're here for the kids' content. The time-limit function is especially good, letting you set available screen time by type of content or time of day. ![]() Independent settings disable the camera, filter web sites to only show "age-appropriate" ones (by Amazon's definition), show you a child's web history, turn off in-app purchases, and control all content that appears on their profile. You can set up multiple child profiles with different ages. Some of the sales pitch here is around the parental controls, which are baked in and are better than the default parental controls on Apple and Android devices. You can set up adult profiles on the kids' tablets too, and they'll just work like the grownup versions. There's a comparison grid on the product pages claiming that the Kids tablet has "hand-picked sites" in the web browser, while the Kids Pro version is "open but filtered." But both of those options stem from a software setting in a child's profile, which you can set up on any Amazon tablet. Amazon's website is pretty misleading on this. Otherwise, all of the software and content on these tablets is the same-and all of it is also available on the other Fire HD 10 models. The Kids (right) and Kids Pro (left) tablets are differentiated solely by their cases. It suits kids who have learned to handle objects gently and are adamant about having outgrown babyish things. It still has a kickstand, and it's still protective, but it isn't nearly as big or bouncy as the younger-kids model. The Fire HD 10 Kids Pro, for older kids, comes with a slimmer case in black, two variants of blue, or a "doodle" pattern. It's also somewhat splashproof, so you can definitely dribble on it. The thing will literally bounce if you drop it on the ground. The Fire HD 10 Kids, for littles, has a giant rubbery case with a big fold-down kickstand on the back, and it comes in blue, pink, or purple. For all that, you pay $50 more than for the standard Fire HD 10, so there's considerable savings involved. Each one is a Fire HD 10 tablet with a sturdy case (worth about $15), no ads on the lock screen (with a basic Fire HD 10, you'd have to pay $15 to go ad-free), a year of the Amazon Kids+ content subscription service for four kids (which costs $69 for Prime members and $99 for everyone else), and a two-year "Worry Free Guarantee" that covers damage from ordinary use (the base model's one-year warranty only covers manufacturing defects). ![]() The kid-friendly models are identical except for their cases (more on that in a second). ![]()
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