Battling the e-reader juggernaut Amazon is tough. Just ask Barnes & Noble.
Yet, Kobo lives on – not just surviving, but thriving. The Japanese company's success in the e-reader market can be pinned equally on its strong international presence and its willingness to create a product specifically tuned to the wants and needs of its most hardcore customers.
The Kobo Aura HD is a device for those hardcores: people who not only crave a better e-ink screen (really, who doesn't?), but also those who pay closer attention to a device's design. Most of all, they're people who root for the little guy. They shop at independent bookstores and routinely pick titles from small publishers, side-loading them on their e-readers. They're also people who prefer to contribute to the success of a hardware device not made by the bigger, more dominant company.
In this case, the rewards aren't just warm and fuzzy vibes. There's a clear win: the Aura HD has the best screen on the e-reader market today. The display – a 6.8-inch, 1440 x 1080 screen with a density of 265 ppi – knocks the Kindle Paperwhite off its throne as e-ink emperor. Text appears crisper on the Aura's display than on any of the other e-readers I've tested, not just the Paperwhite.
Kobo's excellent ComfortLight feature has also been upgraded, and surpasses the Kobo Glo's screen – not an easy feat, considering the Glo bested the bunch in that department. The light leans more toward yellow than the Glo, so it isn't as harsh and it gives the screen a hue that more closely resembles the printed page. The brightness levels are nearly uniform from edge to edge with a only a very slight dark area at the bottom of screen – ironically, where the actual lights reside. Compound that with Kobo's TypeGenius feature that can fine-tune a font's size, weight and sharpness (a wonderful add for not just font nerds, but for the visually impaired) and you have a reading environment that's superior in every way.

