In families with kids who are my daughter’s age, the great debates are no longer over breast over bottle, or daycare versus nanny. It’s not even nature versus nurture. Now we all argue over which device to use to distract our kids on painful long plane rides, or the (very) occasional dinner out. The Amazon Fire Kids? Or a kidproofed iPad Mini?
It’s a tough call. As with any parenting debate, both answers are fine. Last year, I noted that with the Fire HD 8 Kids, the price covered many features in addition to the actual hardware. Those same features are also all included with this year’s edition: You get a two-year worry-free replacement guarantee; a protective foam case; and a year’s subscription to FreeTime Unlimited, Amazon’s kid’s content platform that lets you filter the books, apps, and movies that your kid can access through the parent dashboard.
And yes, an older kid might wonder why you get to slide your hands over the cool, smooth, aluminum-and-glass exterior of an iPad, while they’re stuck with the much cheaper plastic Fire. Yes, you can get the new Fire HD 8 for a little cheaper. And finally, yes, I don’t think this year’s minimal changes add very much to the user’s experience.
But the user in this house is a three-year-old. To write this review, I had to dig out the tester from the closet, where I hide it when she’s at home. Then I had to wipe yogurt fingerprints off the screen. Her review: She loves it. Am I, her parent, willing to pay a little more for convenience and a little more peace and quiet? Does James Brown like to get down? Obviously, yes.
As with the new Fire HD 8 and last year’s Fire HD 8 Kids, this new kid’s edition is a small tablet, with a plastic body and glass screen. Unlike the Fire HD 8, it comes in a puffy protective case that increases the tablet’s total dimensions to 9.6 inches wide and 6.1 inches tall. But at under 20 ounces, it’s still small enough for a toddler to hold comfortably in her lap.
It took the full six hours to charge the battery from 0 percent, which is painfully slow when you’re traveling and you need just enough juice to make it one more hour on this flight. The battery life was noticeably shorter on this edition. We recently went through an unusually social weekend where I let her play on the Fire for an hour or two during dinner every night. After three days, the battery was drained completely.
That’s partly due to Amazon including hands-free Alexa this year—a feature that is useless in the kid's edition, since it doesn’t work when the parental controls are activated. In Amazon’s defense, my toddler has also developed a penchant for playing more games this year, which drained the battery quicker. Last year, she was more interested in flipping through books.
