3 Minutes
Call it ambitious. Brave — an Indian startup that shares a name with a well-known browser but not its maker — has just launched a big Android tablet that wants to be more than a media device.
The Ark arrives with a 12.95-inch 144Hz LCD panel at 2,880 x 1,840 pixels. Smooth scrolling, crisp text, and a refresh rate that helps games and animations feel alive. Android 15 sits under the hood, and the company added a custom Desktop Mode that stretches the tablet into a productivity machine. Plug in a USB-C display and you get multi-screen workflows; windows can be freely resized for real multitasking, not just tile-and-tap tricks.
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Under the chassis beats a Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 chip — not the newest silicon, but still capable. Think Cortex-X4 paired with efficiency cores and an Adreno 735 GPU. Brave ships a single configuration for now: 12GB of RAM and 256GB of storage, with a microSD slot for expansion if you hoard files.
What steals the headline is the battery. A 14,550mAh dual-cell pack hides inside a body that measures 7.6mm thick. That’s huge capacity in a surprisingly slim frame. Charging tops out at 33W via USB Power Delivery, so juice-up times are reasonable for the size of the tank.
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Brave didn’t forget the accessories. A magnetic keyboard snaps on and connects through pogo pins, and yes — there’s an AI key baked into the layout for quick prompts and shortcuts. For pen users, the Ark Pen is included in the box. The digitizer tracks the pen at 240Hz with sub-10ms latency, recognizes 4,096 pressure levels, and reads tilt beyond 50 degrees. The stylus also attaches magnetically and lasts up to around 12 hours on a charge.
Audio gets some attention too. Eight speakers — arranged as four woofers and four tweeters — run with DTS tuning. That configuration aims to deliver fuller sound for streaming, conference calls, and casual gaming.

The first retail offering lands on Amazon India with an MSRP of ₹35,000 for the 12/256GB unit. Early adopters get a perk: the first 200 buyers receive the keyboard for free. The standard retail box includes the stylus, a case, and a charger. If you want more protection or a different stand, Brave will also sell a shock-resistant shell and a TPU leather case with a kickstand.

It’s a package that clearly tilts toward students and mobile professionals who want tablet portability without sacrificing desktop-like multitasking. The Ark won’t dethrone flagship tablets on raw specs alone, but its battery size, desktop features, and bundled pen make it an intriguing option — especially at its price point.
Curious to try a tablet that thinks bigger than your usual slate? The Ark is live and ready to be tested in the real world.
Source: gsmarena
Comments
Reza
Is the 33W charging a typo? big battery vs slow-ish charging, how long to full? Desktop Mode sounds neat but will Android handle proper multitasking?
atomwave
Wow didn't expect that battery in such a thin tablet! 14,550mAh?? If real, game changer. Magnetic pen included too, nice.


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