For the original German review, see here.

Lenovo's tablets are always good for a surprise: With its Yoga, the manufacturer was one of the first to implement the convertible idea convincingly. They have built-in kickstands or an amazingly convenient handle including generous room for the battery. Or what about having a projector installed directly into the tablet? Lenovo's Tab 4 10 Plus is sooner a traditional mid-range tablet but Lenovo has come up with something special for it anyway: Special accessory packs allow optimizing the tablet for children or for work, or Amazon's personal assistant Alexa can be set up.

If all of this is not needed, potential buyers still get a 10.1-inch tablet with a fairly good memory configuration and a mid-range SoC. Its slim design and a glass rear should convince in terms of looks. Consumers also have some alternatives that we use for comparison. For example, the company's own Medion Lifetab P1050, Asus' ZenPad 10, Huawei's MediaPad M3 Lite or Asus' ZenPad 3S 10. Another interesting question is whether spending almost twice as much compared to Lenovo's Tab 4 10 is worthwhile.