Shield’s tablet is therefore competitively priced with most of its peers, and Nvidia claims that its tablet will drastically outperform rivals including the iPad in both benchmark tests and real-world gaming performance. There’s an LTE option coming later, and the Wi-Fi version goes on sale July 29 starting at $299 for a 16GB version, or $399 for one with 32GB of built-in storage, though both options also offer expandable memory via MicroSD of up to 128 additional GB. The Shield wireless controller offers low latency Wi-Fi connectivity, with about the same lag time as an Xbox 360 controller according to Nvidia. The new Nvidia Shield Tablet has an 8-inch, 1920×1200 display for native HD resolution, two front-facing speakers, and a cover accessory that can also be used to prop it up as a kickstand, which is obviously useful for gaming scenarios.
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