

What are Amazon Fires good for? The short answer is tablets and TV. Amazon's Fire brand is used for its tablets, which began as budget bargains and have evolved into very impressive devices suitable for all kinds of people and uses, and for its TV streaming hardware such as its Fire TV sticks.
Here's what each kind of Fire excels at.
Amazon Fire tablets
With the latest upgrade to the smallest Fire tablet, the entire Fire tablet range delivers decent performance for very low prices. Amazon is constantly refreshing the best Amazon Fire deals, so you can usually expect to save quite a bit on at least one of the current crop.
At the time of writing Amazon makes Fire tablets in three sizes – seven inches, eight inches and ten inches – and in three different guises: standard Fire tablets, Kids Edition Fire tablets with tough cases and child-friendly software, and Fire Plus tablets, which have higher storage capacities and wireless charging. Every model is priced to sell: the 10-inch, 32GB Fire HD10 Plus is currently £189, or £179 if you don't mind ads on the Lock Screen.
If you're looking for the best cheap tablets, the Fires should absolutely be on your shortlist: they're superb value for money and they're more capable than you might expect, so for example the HD10 Plus runs Microsoft Office. And the Kids editions are brilliant, not least because they come with a no-fuss replacement guarantee that covers accidental damage as well as hardware failure.
As with all Amazon own-brand kit, don't pay full RRP: if there isn't a deal now one will be along shortly.
Sign up to the T3 newsletter for smarter living straight to your inbox
Get all the latest news, reviews, deals and buying guides on gorgeous tech, home and active products from the T3 experts
Amazon Fire TV sticks
The other kind of Amazon Fire is the TV streamer, which turns any TV into a smart TV with Amazon Prime Video and lots of third-party TV apps including Netflix and iPlayer. It's important to note that other subscription services aren't included in the price, so if you want to watch Netflix via your Fire TV Stick you'll need to sign up for a subscription.
Early models were a bit underpowered but the current range is excellent and there are always Fire TV Stick deals to cut the already low cost even further. Just make sure you get the right one: there's an HD stick as well as a 4K one, and a super-cheap Lite version that still delivers HD but doesn't control your TV. I'd recommend buying the best one you can afford: right now my pick would be the Fire TV Stick 4K Max.
Writer, musician and broadcaster Carrie Marshall has been covering technology since 1998 and is particularly interested in how tech can help us live our best lives. Her CV is a who’s who of magazines, newspapers, websites and radio programmes ranging from T3, Techradar and MacFormat to the BBC, Sunday Post and People’s Friend. Carrie has written more than a dozen books, ghost-wrote two more and co-wrote seven more books and a Radio 2 documentary series; her memoir, Carrie Kills A Man, was shortlisted for the British Book Awards. When she’s not scribbling, Carrie is the singer in Glaswegian rock band Unquiet Mind (unquietmindmusic).
-
I didn't expect to be charmed by this Netflix trailer, but here we are
Happy Gilmore 2 looks... decent??
-
You might not realise it, but this is Netflix's biggest show – and it got a huge teaser
Wednesday has been smashing records
-
Has Netflix ever had a bigger sci-fi show than the one returning this year?
Stranger Things 5 will be gigantic
-
These are the 3 Western shows you need to catch streaming right now
If you want a good Western, these are the best
-
Alien: Earth is about to make Disney+ the best sci-fi streaming service
Its first trailer is crazy
-
This huge show makes one surprising streaming service even more of a contender
Paramount+ takes another big scalp
-
Prime Video's lesser-known sci-fi show gets a wild Season 2 trailer
Gen V is upping the ante
-
Apple TV+ in June: New shows and movies you can't afford to miss
The best streamer gets better