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ASUS is back in tablets with the ASUS Pad T3201 and a 144Hz OLED display

ASUS returns to the Android tablet scene with the ASUS Pad T3201, a 12.2-inch 2.8K 144Hz OLED slate powered by Dimensity 8300, Android 16, and a 9,000mAh battery.

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Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jun 3, 2026, 9:00 AM EDT
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ASUS Pad (T3201M5A)
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ASUS is officially back in the tablet game, and it’s not dipping a toe in the shallow end. With the new ASUS Pad (T3201), the company is coming in hot with a 12.2-inch 2.8K 144Hz OLED display, a MediaTek Dimensity 8300 under the hood, and Android 16 out of the box. After years of sitting out the Android tablet race, this feels less like a quiet re-entry and more like ASUS turning up at Computex 2026 and saying, “Alright, let’s do this properly.”

The first thing that stands out about the ASUS Pad is that screen. It’s a 12.2-inch dual-layer OLED panel with a 2.8K resolution (2800 x 1840), a tall 3:2 aspect ratio, 144Hz refresh rate, 600 nits typical brightness, and full DCI-P3 coverage. On paper, that’s the sort of spec list you’d usually associate with a high-end laptop or a premium gaming monitor, not a mainstream Android tablet. ASUS is clearly leaning into the idea that displays are the new battleground, and if you spend most of your day doomscrolling, binge-watching, or reading long-form pieces, this kind of pixel density and smoothness matters more than you might expect. The 3:2 ratio is also a smart call: it makes the Pad feel more like a digital notebook or an ultrabook screen than a stretched-out 16:9 media slab, which should appeal to people who want to read, annotate, and multitask, not just stream shows.

Physically, the tablet strikes that now-familiar “thin but not fragile” balance. The Pad comes in at 6.5 mm thick and about 523 grams, with a magnalium chassis and fiberglass back. That combination is a very ASUS move: light enough to be genuinely portable, but not so insanely thin that you’re scared to toss it into a backpack. The company is also including a protective case in the box, which feels like a subtle acknowledgment that tablets are more likely to get used on couches, beds, and coffee shop tables than on pristine office desks. For people who remember ASUS’ early Transformer tablets, the T3201 reads like a more mature, modern take on that formula: less about flashy 2-in-1 gimmicks, more about making a solid, everyday slab that can flex between entertainment and productivity.

  • ASUS Pad (T3201M5A)
  • ASUS Pad (T3201M5A)
  • ASUS Pad (T3201M5A)
  • ASUS Pad (T3201M5A)

Under the hood, ASUS is betting on MediaTek rather than Qualcomm. The Pad uses a Dimensity 8300 chipset, built on a 4nm process, paired with 8GB of LPDDR5x RAM and either 128GB or 256GB of UFS 3.1 storage, plus a microSD slot that supports up to 1TB expansion. That puts it in a very capable upper-midrange territory: enough grunt for smooth multitasking, casual to mid-core gaming, and AI features, without venturing into ultra-premium territory where prices tend to spike. MediaTek’s recent Dimensity lineup has been quietly winning a lot of OEM mindshare, and seeing it at the heart of a high-profile ASUS tablet sends a clear signal that the brand is no longer just a “budget” option.

Battery life is another area where ASUS doesn’t look like it’s taking chances. The Pad packs a 9,000mAh battery and supports 45W USB-C fast charging (PD 3.0), which ASUS and early coverage suggest should get the tablet from empty to around 50 percent in roughly half an hour. That’s important for the use cases ASUS is clearly steering toward: long streaming sessions, note-taking in class, or using it as a second screen with a laptop throughout the workday. The bigger the OLED panel and the higher the refresh rate, the more power you can burn, so pairing that with a genuinely generous battery feels less like a spec flex and more like a practical requirement.

On the audio and camera side, ASUS is ticking boxes without overpromising. You get quad speakers (four 1W drivers) with Dolby Atmos support, which should make it a more convincing portable cinema than a lot of cheaper tablets that still ship with an apologetic single speaker. The cameras are a 13MP rear and 5MP front setup – nothing ground-breaking, but totally fine for video calls, document scans, and the occasional photo when your phone isn’t around. No one buys a 12-inch tablet for its camera system, and ASUS seems fully aware of that, focusing instead on the pieces that actually define day-to-day experience: display, battery, sound, and software.

Speaking of software, this is one of the more interesting angles. The ASUS Pad ships with Android 16, wrapped in a light ASUS layer that leans heavily on Google’s current AI stack. Circle to Search is built in, letting you long-press and draw around anything on-screen to trigger context-aware search without jumping apps, which feels especially natural on a large canvas like this. ASUS also highlights Google Gemini integration, positioning the Pad as an AI-savvy device rather than just another streaming slab. In practice, that could mean everything from AI summaries of what you’re reading to more intelligent recommendations and smarter search inside your content – assuming Google continues to lean into Gemini-as-layer rather than Gemini-as-app.

At the same time, ASUS is not giving up on its own ecosystem story. The Pad supports ASUS GlideX, which allows you to link the tablet with a PC for screen sharing, extended display use, and drag-and-drop file workflows. If you’ve used Sidecar on a Mac with an iPad, you’ll have a good sense of what ASUS seems to be aiming for here: the tablet as a flexible second screen that can quickly become a sketchbook, a reference display, or a mirrored view for presentations. Combined with support for ASUS Pen 2.0 and Bluetooth keyboards, the Pad starts to feel less like a strictly “personal entertainment” device and more like a Swiss Army tablet that can shuffle between roles depending on what you plug into it.

The connectivity story is modern, if not bleeding-edge. You get Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.3, and a single USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-C port that supports DisplayPort 1.4 video out and Power Delivery 3.0 for charging. That one port is doing a lot of heavy lifting, from connecting external displays to fast charging, but this is the reality of most tablets today. The upside is that, in theory, a single USB-C hub could transform the Pad into a makeshift desktop with an external monitor, keyboard, and mouse – especially handy if you’re leaning on Android 16’s improved multitasking and windowing.

All of this is happening within the context of ASUS returning to a market it hasn’t actively fought in for years. Earlier Android tablet experiments from the brand showed flashes of ambition – detachable keyboards, hybrid form factors, aggressive pricing – but often struggled against Apple’s iPad ecosystem and Samsung’s relentless Galaxy Tab lineup. The new ASUS Pad is a different kind of play. Rather than trying to out-iPad the iPad, ASUS is building a very Android-forward tablet that leans into modern display tech, solid performance, big battery, and tight hooks into both Google AI tools and ASUS’ own cross-device software. It feels more like ASUS is acknowledging where Android is strongest now – openness, AI integrations, and productivity flexibility – and designing around that.

One notable omission so far is pricing and detailed regional availability. ASUS’ official materials and early coverage have focused heavily on specs and positioning, but haven’t pinned down what this will cost or exactly which markets will get it first. That’s going to be a crucial part of the story, especially in markets like the US, where tablets live in a tight squeeze between budget Amazon Fire devices at the low end and premium iPads at the top. If ASUS can bring the Pad in at a price that undercuts Samsung’s higher-end Galaxy Tab models while still feeling genuinely premium, it has a shot at winning over people who are bored of the same few usual suspects. If it drifts too far into laptop-money territory, the conversation becomes tougher.

Still, at a time when a lot of Android tablets feel like afterthoughts or glorified media players, the ASUS Pad (T3201) reads as surprisingly intentional. A 12.2-inch 2.8K 144Hz OLED screen, a Dimensity 8300, 8GB RAM, 128/256GB storage with expandable memory, 9,000mAh battery with 45W charging, Wi-Fi 6E, quad speakers with Dolby Atmos, Android 16, Gemini and Circle to Search, GlideX, and stylus support – that’s a very stacked feature sheet for a “first stab back” at the category. It’s not trying to reinvent what a tablet is, but it is trying to refine the experience in a way that feels aligned with how people actually use these devices in 2026: as flexible, AI-aware, multi-role companions that are just as comfortable streaming a show as they are serving as a second monitor next to a laptop.


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