Design The LeapPad Platinum is easily identifiable as a kid-friendly tablet: it looks chunky, friendly and approachable. A green rubber bumper surrounds the tablet’s white plastic frame, with a dark gray bezel around the 7-inch display. A d-pad, speaker and small, green home button sit to the left of the screen, while a 2-megapixel camera sits above and to the right. The volume buttons, on the bottom edge, are to the right of the tethered and stowed green stylus. The tablet’s right edge houses a mini USB power port, power button and proprietary game cartridge slots, while the left edge is home to a headphone jack. You’ll find another 2-MP camera on the back. Display and Audio The 7-inch, 1024 x 600-pixel display on the LeapPad Platinum wasn’t designed to be photo- realistic. Its app icons are cartoonish, and the majority of the preloaded videos in the browser are animated. That’s probably for the best because what we saw was all pretty undefined. One preapproved, low-resolution YouTube video of a father and daughter singing “You Belong to Me” was as fuzzy as I expected. By comparison, the Fire Kids looked a tad sharper, even though it offers the same resolution as the LeapPad. In a music video for Anna Graceman’s “Crazy World,” the video stuttered and showed jagged lines through it at times. The LeapPad’s single speaker faces the child from the top left corner. It could not fill a small conference room in our office, but was loud enough up close. Parents will appreciate the headphone jack, because every button press is immediately followed by beeps and blerps. MORE: Best Ultrabooks (Thin-and-Light Windows Laptops) “Crazy World,” played through YouTube, lacked all sense of bass. But I could make out most of the piano notes and all of Graceman’s bravado-filled voice. There is a separate music app, but it only comes preloaded with a few options. You can purchase more, like the $15 “Frozen” soundtrack, through the LeapFrog App Center. Parental Controls The child-facing part of the LeapPad’s user interface is intuitive. However, finding the tablet’s parental controls was a bit of a mystery. On the first welcome screen, where you select which profile to enter, you have to know to tap the clock or group icon at the bottom of the screen to get to the parental controls. Once there, the interface looks very similar to the child profiles, just with fewer colors and the fact that the screen orients to portrait instead of landscape. The green-and-white app icons let you control the tablet’s wireless setup, access the App Center and manage your apps. You can check the system info, reset your lock password or change your location here. But most important, you can manage your children’s profiles. Interface Unlike many other kiddie tablets, the LeapPad Platinum is not an Android tablet. LeapFrog preloads its own proprietary operating system, which is dead simple to navigate. At every turn, video tutorials automatically play, and continue to play every time you turn on the tablet. Assuming kids can read, the buttons are clearly labeled and easy to press. Each child’s profile is tailored to that child’s age and personal preferences on background, user name, etc. When you select a profile, a horizontal home screen loads with 12 oversize square app icons. Swiping from right to left brings up a second, similar page with 11 more icons. Pet and Pet Chat are the least self-explanatory. In Pet, kids can create their own cartoon avatar, build a house for it to live in and play games with it. In Pet Chat, that avatar can message back and forth with another child’s preapproved avatar, using prewritten statements such as “How are you?” and “See you later, alligator.” Other preloaded apps, such as Music, Photo Fun and Notepad apps, are pretty straightforward. The LeapPad’s preloaded apps also include an app center and a kid-friendly browser called LeapSearch, while six demos, four games, a clock, a calculator and a calendar round out the other offerings already on the tablet. Apps Beyond what comes preloaded, the App Center offers a ton of content. According to LeapFrog, the LeapPad Platinum comes with access to a library of 1,000-plus educator-approved games, apps and videos. Some apps automatically adjust according to the grade level in your child’s profile. App store descriptions show what each app teaches as well as what age group it’s for with a small description. For instance, the Cosmic Cleanup environment science app teaches how to make observations and think like a scientist; it’s best for 5- to 8-year-olds. The Disney Frozen Learning Game teaches 4- to 7-year-olds grammar, handwriting, spelling, story sequence and word-building. You can sort the app store by games, videos or e-books. All of the best-sellers range between $7 and $10 – that Disney game is in the more expensive tier of apps at $20 – but your first app selection is free. Kids can access the App Center from their profiles, and can even add apps to the cart or wish list. But they cannot go to the checkout without mom or dad’s password, preventing unauthorized purchases. MORE: Best Chromebooks Available Now Cards and Cartridges LeapFrog bundles the LeapPad Platinum with six Imagicards. The cards interact with the built-in photography app like a QR code to help teach reading skills and bring the characters on the cards to life. However, beyond those six, which are more of a teaser than a useful set, you can buy cards in conjunction with game cartridges you can insert into the LeapPad’s cartridge slot. For instance, the $24.99 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Imagicard game for 5- to 8-year-olds helps teach kids math skills while the Turtles recover a lost item through a cartridge and 31 cards. While this tablet doesn’t come with any cartridges, tons are available from LeapFrog. They work, more or less, like educational apps. The $24.99 Octonauts Learning Game exposes kids to marine life while teaching scientific thinking. We prefer the app route to LeapFrog’s cartridges, if only because it leaves fewer items to get stuck underfoot and ultimately lost between seat cushions. Performance Because of LeapFrog’s proprietary operating system, we were unable to run our usual suite of synthetic benchmarks on the LeapPad Platinum. However, in my anecdotal experience, it is not the snappiest performer. It takes several seconds to switch between apps or return to the home page. For instance, it took 6 seconds for the camera to open, and then 4 more seconds to return to the home page. While the kid-friendly videos and games that come preloaded ran smoothly, the LeapSearch browser app had me tapping my toes waiting for pages to load. Even very patient children (those exist, right?) will find it hard to not get frustrated with the tablet’s sluggish performance. Cameras The front and back of the LeapPad Platinum tablet are adorned with 2-megapixel cameras. Those will both come in handy when playing with the company’s Imagicards. You can also use them for selfies to be added to each child’s profile. However, these won’t be images you want to frame. The selfies and shots of my colorful toy collection looked pixelated and fuzzy with very little definition. There’s also no way to export your shots from the tablet. Both cameras also shoot 480p video, which also can’t be exported. Other than shooting video of a little brother being silly or the family dog playing in the snow, there’s no obvious reason your child would need this capability. Battery Life LeapFrog claims the LeapPad Platinum should last 5 hours on a charge. MORE: 10 Tablets with the Longest Battery Life We were unable to run the Laptop Mag Battery Test on our unit, but 5 hours is far shy of the 9 hours and 11 minutes that is our tablet average. The Fire Kids tablet lasted 6 hours and 42 minutes. Bottom Line
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