
This early Prime Day offer turns the Fire HD 8 Plus into an unbeatable steal
Amazon Fire HD 8 Plus: save 54% with Prime
$65 off (54%)
You may not need to wait until Prime Day to get a Fire tablet at absolutely unbeatable prices. Right now, the Amazon Fire HD 8 Plus sells for a stunning 54% off its original price. That lets Prime members get the base storage model for less than $60!
Buy at Amazon
Fire HD 8 Plus (2022), 64GB: save 43% with Prime
$65 off (43%)
Prime members who need more onboard storage aren't left out! The Fire HD 8 Plus with 64GB storage is also on sale before Prime Day 2025 kicks off, and you can save 43% on it, possibly for a limited time. Act fast and enjoy your savings.
Buy at Amazon
Receive the latest mobile news
Subscribe
By subscribing you agree to our terms and conditions and privacy policy
Grab Surfshark VPN now at more than 50% off and with 3 extra months for free!
Secure your connection now at a bargain price!
We may earn a commission if you make a purchase
Check Out The Offer
Prime Day is still over two weeks away, but Amazon has just released a simply irresistible Prime-exclusive deal you can't ignore. For a limited time, the Fire HD 8 Plus—normally priced around $120—is 54% off, making it an absolute steal you just can't pass up.Prime Day 2025 may bring deeper discounts on other Fire tablets next month. But let's be honest: this particular model likely won't get any cheaper. So, if you're looking for a family-friendly, everyday entertainment device under $60, this might just be the perfect fit.For context, the stunning 54% markdown is available on the 3/32GB base version of this slate with lockscreen ad support. If that doesn't quite suit you, the larger storage option with 64GB of built-in space is also on sale. That one goes for 43% off its original price. Again, this is a Prime-exclusive deal, so you need a membership to take advantage.Ideal for the whole family, this 8-inch tablet gives you all the basics you can ask for. It's lighter and thinner, making it easier to handle by children, plus it's supposed to be pretty durable.Although it's far from a performance beast, the Fire HD 8 Plus lets you stream videos, check your email, browse recipes, and more without hiccups. Of course, you'd have to extend your budget (considerably) for a more powerful tablet, but this one handles daily tasks well enough.Then, you have Alexa support, allowing you to stream videos or your favorite tunes, shop, or call friends and family without any effort. In addition, this ultra-affordable tablet delivers up to 13 hours of on-screen time, which is remarkable for its current price.At the end of the day, the Fire HD 8 Plus may not be the perfect choice for power users, but Prime members on a budget should seriously consider getting it. At 54% off in its 32GB variant, it's easily the best early Prime Day tablet deal we've seen.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


GSM Arena
an hour ago
- GSM Arena
Nothing Headphones (1) leak on video
Nothing will release its first-ever over-ear headphones alongside the upcoming Nothing Phone (3) – that's happening on July 1 (Tuesday). The company has created a suitably kooky design, which leaked a few days ago. Now, an even bigger leak has hit the web. This video is based on unconfirmed info, but offers potential answers to some burning questions. For example, what's with that weird square shape? The additional internal volume could help the drivers 'breathe' better – this would improve sound quality and ANC. Speaking of sound quality, Nothing struck up a partnership with KEF earlier this year – KEF is a British company that builds high-end audio products and has agreed to tune the Headphones (1) (and other Nothing products). Anyway, the headband doesn't fold, but the ear cups can be rotated 90° to lie flat. There is an assortment of buttons and sliders to control volume and playback. You can see a USB-C cable plugged into the headphones, a 3.5mm plug is a possibility. Nothing Headphones (1) (leaked images) In terms of price, the Nothing Headphones (1) will be $300 in the US (yes, these are coming to the US and Canada) and €300/£300 in Europe. Via 1 | Via 2


Phone Arena
2 hours ago
- Phone Arena
Apple's iPhones may just kill my favorite niche phone brand
That's it? A simple Games app? Apple is making an actual push into gaming. And for ROG Phones, this is bad news While Apple got Assassin's Creed: Mirage and will be getting Shadows, Android is still stuck with the Funko Pop edition (Assassin's Creed Rebellion). Resident Evil Village launched on iDevices with an A17 Pro or M-class chips, and is a technically impressive feat. The same goes for RE4: Remake. Hideo Kojima's Death Stranding is available on iOS/iPadOS, with absolutely no word or mention of plans to bring it to Android. Ironically, Android had the chance to be ahead in this game So what needs to happen? iOS 26 Apple announced a new Games app coming with iOS 26 — and at first glance, it might not look like a big deal. But after thinking about it for a bit… I'm starting to sweat for my beloved niche gaming phone : the Asus ROG what is this Games app? Essentially, it's a game launcher that can be navigated with a connected controller — turning your iPhone into a portable console experience. It comes with an easy discover section, news updates on game seasons and limited-time events, and even a social layer: high score comparisons, friend challenges, and party/game invites are all baked a Games app isn't a revolution — but it adds just the right layer of polish. One of my personal complaints about iPhones for gaming was the lack of a dedicated mode — no way to lock brightness or block notifications that ruin your clutch be fair, there is a Gaming Focus mode among the many Do Not Disturb modes that Apple introduced with iOS 15 in 2021. You can set it up to block notifications, prioritize specific apps or contacts, et you still need to activate Gaming Focus manually, and remember to deactivate it when you are done gaming. Alternatively, you can do a deep dive and set iOS up yourself, to automatically start Gaming Mode when you open a specific app. Again, you need to remember to do this every time you install a new game. Android phones , on the other hand, typically recognize games and put them in their game launcher, which does everything for you automatically. Ironically, that's a more Apple-ish Focus Mode doesn't stop the phone's auto-brightness from fluctuating, and that can be a problem when you are claw-gripping the phone in a sweaty deathmatch. Having your brightness drop during a duel is a pain point!If Apple is looking to make things just right, it should be planning to include these and make them automatic in the Games worth noting: at WWDC 2025, Apple put a lot of emphasis on Sony controllers — it looks like a partnership might be brewing. Could this mean future games will ship with controller-first support? Could we see more PlayStation titles ported to iOS? If so, Android is in real trouble.I've been an ROG Phone fan for years. The series always had phenomenal hardware — sensitive screens, ultrasonic shoulder buttons, fan extensions, top-class speakers. It really does feel like a handheld console at times. But my biggest gripe has never been the hardware. It's Android matter how powerful the device, the Android platform simply doesn't have a robust library of high-quality games. Yes, we've seen slow progress — titles like Call of Duty Mobile, Genshin Impact, Diablo Immortal, the new Delta Force, and Arena these were mostly developed from the ground up as mobile titles, and do come with that certain mobile game feel. Specifically the multiple layers of menus that are designed to be confusing, special currencies, and the comparatively shallow comparison, iOS is leaps and bounds ahead. It's getting true console-level games — ones that were originally made for the PS, Xbox, and PC:Now, all is not perfect. These ports may target 30 FPS, which they may or may not hit. And, generally, touch controls don't agree with them very well, and it's recommended to have a controller — that's the downside when a game hasn't been developed as a mobile title from the ground up. Or, it just shows that these developers are yet inexperienced with the platform — touchscreen gaming is very, very new to it shows that there's a genuine push from Apple in that direction, and things are just now ramping up. For example — Cupertino bought its first-ever gaming studio recently. Granted, developer RAC7 is mostly a two-man operation, but it did push out the super-successful Apple Arcade game Sneaky Sasquatch. Obviously, Apple is in its first steps of a pretty hard push into the ironic twist. Android was first to getting an actual console game ported to it way back in 2016! Back then, Nvidia had the vision of creating a tablet for gamers. The Nvidia Shield was launched in 2015, and as a push to be 'taken seriously', Nvidia struck some sort of exclusive deal with a result, the excellent Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance was available on the Play Store! It was followed by MGS 2 and MGS 3 in 2017!Now, since this was an exclusive deal, you couldn't download the games on a device other than the Nvidia still, it very much showed that it's possible to port such games to Google's operating system, so long as there was an initiative behind and sadly, since the Nvidia Shield is a dead product and the exclusive contracts are gone, these games are simply gone from the Play Store now, instead of living on a fruitful life. You can't possibly tell me that today's flagship smartphones can not run what a tablet from 2015 further drive the point that this is not far-fetched — the excellent video editing app LumaFusion has been on iOS since 2016, and it took for Samsung to partner up with the developer for the app to finally arrive to Android — in 2023. The added bonus is that LumaFusion is not exclusive to Samsung devices right now, so you can go ahead and download it to benefit from that partnership, even if not on a Samsung phone ASUS needs to act fast. The ROG Phone line has been drifting toward 'mainstream flagship with LED lights on the back' — which waters down its niche appeal. In my opinion, the ROG Phone 7 Ultimate was the last true gaming beast from the company. Time to circle back and double down on what made the brand Android needs to catch up in the premium games department. Maybe Asus can leverage some connections and make some sort of partnership like the aforementioned examples. Ideally, that'd be done by Google, but let's face it — Google is kind of busy with and going all-hands on AI right Google would be the one to make the step and entire premium publisher and Google is over-invested in pouring resources into AI — which may or may not be the right call long-term. But in the short term, it means thatcould very well kill my favorite niche phone brand. Which would be a shame, as the ROG Phones have been THE de-facto gamer phone for so many years now.


Phone Arena
3 hours ago
- Phone Arena
Klarna's latest integration could change how you pay with your phone
Image credit — Klarna Klarna is now live in Google Pay To get started, existing Klarna users must link their accounts to Google Pay, while new users can go through the setup directly within the Google Pay app. Once linked, shoppers can select Klarna as their BNPL provider during checkout and manage transactions via the Google Wallet website. This move rounds out Google Pay's BNPL ecosystem, which already includes Affirm, Zip, and Afterpay. It also comes at a time when Klarna is expanding far beyond payments. Receive the latest Google news Subscribe By subscribing you agree to our terms and conditions and privacy policy Klarna's ecosystem keeps growing Just days before this integration went live, Klarna made headlines by entering the U.S. mobile carrier market To get started, existing Klarna users must link their accounts to Google Pay, while new users can go through the setup directly within the Google Pay app. Once linked, shoppers can select Klarna as their BNPL provider during checkout and manage transactions via the Google Wallet move rounds out Google Pay's BNPL ecosystem, which already includes Affirm, Zip, and Afterpay. It also comes at a time when Klarna is expanding far beyond days before this integration went live, Klarna made headlines by entering the U.S. mobile carrier market with a new $40/month unlimited 5G plan . The mobile service runs on AT&T 's network, and it promises hassle-free setup with no activation or cancellation fees, as well as eSIM support. All of this is fully managed from the Klarna app. This 5G plan is part of Klarna's strategy to evolve into a broader digital services platform and reflects its desire to simplify and modernize traditionally clunky industries. As we shared in our earlier coverage, the service is built on Gigs' mobile infrastructure and will eventually expand to other countries, including the UK, Germany, and more. Klarna has more than 25 million active U.S. users as of this moment, which makes it well-positioned to cross-sell services across payments and mobile connectivity. Now that Klarna's baked into Google Pay and even selling phone plans, it's clear the company isn't just about splitting payments anymore — it's without a doubt trying to become a one-stop shop for everything from purchases to telecommunication. Grab Surfshark VPN now at more than 50% off and with 3 extra months for free! Secure your connection now at a bargain price! We may earn a commission if you make a purchase Check Out The Offer Google Pay has officially added Klarna to its buy now, pay later (BNPL) roster in the U.S., giving Android users more flexibility when paying for larger purchases. The integration is now live and brings Klarna's Pay in 4 and financing plans to select Android apps and websites that support Google Pay at new integration allows users to split eligible purchases over $35 into four interest-free payments, or opt for long-term financing on more expensive items. Klarna's financing terms start at 0% APR, depending on the user's credit profile and the merchant.