The Fire Max 11 is Amazon’s newest, largest, and most powerful tablet. It’s also a tablet no one wants or needs. Amazon has departed from its ultra-budget hardware to churn out a device that would be a decent mid-level Android tablet if it ran the latest version. But it doesn’t run Android at all; it runs Amazon’s Fire OS, a crippled, nearly useless fork of Android that’s now over two full years’ worth of features behind Google’s mobile operating system.
Take mid-level hardware, slap on an OS that’s good for little more than consuming Amazon content, charge nearly as much as you would for an iPad, and you have a tablet that just can’t keep up with the competition. Even at half the price, as Amazon’s Fire tablets usually are during Prime Day and other sales, the Fire Max 11 is a tough sell.
Out of the box, this is the best Fire tablet Amazon has ever made for consuming Amazon content. The problem comes when you want to do anything other than consume Amazon content.
Amazon sells the Fire Max 11 for $230. For another $100, you can get what Amazon calls the Productivity Bundle, which adds a keyboard, cover, and stylus. But you’re now in the price range of several much nicer tablets that offer a superior software experience.


