This list was last updated: May. 07, 2021
Table of Contents
*You can use the links here to jump to any section.
**You can click the title of any section to be sent back to the Table of Contents immediately.
Information and Suggestions Section
- Foreword
- Things to note before you read my journal
- All tablet brands (that I have found)
- My personal suggestions
Tablet Brands and Their Products
Miscellaneous
Foreword
Please note: This post only covers drawing monitors, the ones with screens that need to be connected to a separate computer to work.
For graphic tablets (the ones without screens), check this post: Wacom Alternatives – Intuos Alternatives
If you are looking for Android/Apple tablets like the iPad Pro or 2-in-1 laptops like the Microsoft Surface Pro, you will have to look elsewhere. (Like here: http://www.parkablogs.com/tags/drawing-tablet-reviews)
This post is intended as a “first look” type of list.
This is NOT an in-depth review of every tablet. This post aims to show you your current tablet options and only lists products that companies still advertise. In other words, if the company has stopped advertising a product on their main site, I probably won’t have it listed here! For example, tablets like the Wacom Intuos Pen and Touch version, or the Wacom Bamboo series which is not listed on the US Wacom site but still obtainable through places such as Amazon.com will not be listed in this post.
Originally, I created this list because searching “Wacom alternatives” on Google would only net you search results of “Top 10 Wacom Alternatives!” lists with completely outdated tablets (half of which aren’t even available anymore *cough designmodo.com and wacomalternatives.com cough*). I personally don’t like the top 10 approach because it’s always based on the opinions of the writer who usually value features different than the reader, so I instead opted for a “here are all the options, research the ones that catch your eye” approach.
I have some a relatively large amount of personal experience with Wacom and the alternatives, and I want everyone to know that the Wacom alternatives are completely usable and are in no way incomparable to Wacom products. Rumours about customer service being horrible are also just rumours. I have not had bad experiences with Huion, XP-Pen, Parblo, Artisul, and GAOMON’s customer services myself. However, if you buy from some really hidden and shady company that I don’t even mention here, then don’t come back and tell me I lied about the customer service being acceptable..
If you put in the time and effort to find the right one for you, you could end up saving a fair bit of money.
Anyways, it’s a long read but I hope it’s at least somewhat informative for my fellow artists looking to buy new tablets! Please spread this to all your art friends as well!
*Also, if you’re too lazy to read and consider your choices, just buy a Wacom. I don’t intend to entertain people who aren’t interested in saving money.
Things to note before you read my journal
(!!!Make sure to read these so you know you’re not going to end up wasting your time reading my journal!!!)
First, I want to start off with a few definitions so that you don’t get confused when I use words different from what you usually use.
-Pen Tablets – This is the name which is used for tablets that don’t have a built-in screen. It is also sometimes referred to as a drawing tablet, screen-less tablet, graphic tablet, slate tablet, etc. I usually refer to it as a Graphic Tablet whenever I’m talking about it in this journal.
-Drawing Monitors – This is the name I will use for tablets that have built-in screens and need to be plugged into a separate desktop or laptop to work. It is sometimes called a pen monitor, pen display, tablet monitor, etc, but I will be referring to it as a Drawing Monitor in this journal.
-Pen Computers – This is the name used for tablets that have a built-in screen and are a standalone computer. In other words, they don’t have to be plugged into your desktop or laptop to work, they work just on their own. I haven’t researched these that much so I have them excluded from this post.
-Pen Types – There are currently 3 pen types which companies use for their tablets: Alkaline, recharging, and battery-free. Alkaline pens use alkaline batteries to power them. Recharging pens use a separate cable to replenish their charge and do not require buying separate batteries like an alkaline pen. Battery-free refers to the pens which do not require any sort of charging for them to work with their tablet, the best examples being any of Wacom’s pens.
-Active Area – This is the area where the tablet senses pen inputs. The easiest way to think of active area is; the bigger it is, the more control you have over your lines. With that said, if you draw long enough on a tablet you can get used to its active area size no matter how big or small it is.
Active area is usually given in inches so I have them all written down in inches. *Active area is always an approximation when given in inches.
-Expresskeys – These are the buttons usually found on the side of tablets for custom shortcuts and such.
-Multi-touch – This is the term used for the finger touch function. If a tablet supports multi-touch, then it supports touch actions like pinching/panning which you commonly see on devices such as a phone.
-Parallax – This only applies to drawing monitors and it is used to describe the thickness of the glass between the screen and your pen. If you look at the screen from the side, you might be able to see a noticeable distance between the pen and the cursor on the screen. That is the parallax.
Second, here are a bunch of assumptions that I make.
- I assume that you use a Windows system such as Windows 8/8.1/10. Most tablets will support Windows and Mac, but not all do. I haven’t gone to check each tablet and whether it does, so those people will have to do a bit more research. Linux and Ubuntu people as well.
- I assume every product has at least a 1 year warranty, but make sure you check about that before you purchase anything.
- I assume you live in North America. All the prices for the products being sold on Amazon are taken from Amazon.com, the US version of Amazon. I have no way of knowing if they offer those same products outside of the US and I am sorry if they are not offered at the same price in your region.
- I assume the tablets work with most programs, but I only use Clip Studio Paint so I cannot guarantee you anything. Make sure you check reviews if you use other programs which may not be supported. Always ask the tablet company directly about compatibility if you are unsure.
And lastly, here are the specs that I think are important while leaving out the rest that are unnecessary and not part of the “deal breakers”.
*This is also the order in which I list them under each product.
Tablet Specifications:
-Price
Price usually depends on the amount of features and the level of the specs.
I will only write down the “base” price from Amazon.com, ignoring sales.
-Active Area
As a reference, I consider around 8 x 5 inches or 10 x 6 inches to be the “best” size for graphic tablets, and 15.6-inches the “ideal” size for drawing monitors. However, that is personal preference and you may prefer other sizes.
-Resolution (of the screen) (Only applies to drawing monitors)
HD (High Definition) is 1280×720 pixels, FHD (Full High Definition) is 1920×1080 pixels, QHD (Quad High Definition) is 2560×1440 pixels, and UHD (Ultra High Definition) is 3840×2160 pixels resolution aka 4K resolution.
I consider acceptable resolution 1920x1080p for 15.6-inche or smaller drawing mintors, and at least 2560x1440p or more for larger displays.
-Display Type (of the screen) (Only applies to drawing monitors)
I simplify display types into two types of TFT LCDs (Thin-Film-Transistor Liquid-Crystal Displays) for drawing monitors: TN and IPS.
TN displays have faster response times, but have very bad viewing angles causing screen colours to look different from different angles. However, TN displays are much easier to manufacture, causing them to be much cheaper than IPS displays. TN displays are more meant for gaming where fast response times are key and colour reproduction is not as important.
IPS displays have slower response times than a TN display, but allows you to view the same colours from basically all angles. An IPS display is the better choice for a drawing monitor because of the importance of proper colour reproduction in art. Better versions of IPS include: S-IPS, AS-IPS, E-IPS, H-IPS, P-IPS. I will list the version (if given) under each drawing monitor, but I will not be detailing what the differences are in this journal. Please look them up yourself if you’re curious!
Pen Specifications:
-Pen Type (Alkaline/Recharging/Battery-free)
Alkaline pens are less than ideal in my eyes, but that is personal preference. Only alkaline pens can offer pen weight which recharging and passive pens cannot.
Recharging pens are not ideal, but they are not a problem either as they last a relatively long time on one charge. The majority last at least a week on a single charge, and Huion’s pens last 800 hours (33 days) on a single charge. The con about recharging pens is that their batteries will degrade after 3-5 years of usage like a phone battery would. However, I feel that buying a replacement pen (~20 USD) is a justifiable cost after 3-5 years of usage.
Battery-free pens are the ideal because they require no maintenance such as recharging, but they are very light and people who wish for pen weight will not like it.
-Pen Buttons
Basically all tablet pens have 2 buttons on the side. Most non-Wacom pens do not have an eraser on the end.
*I personally believe that the eraser on the end is unnecessary because it’s a hassle to flip the pen every time to use it instead of just clicking the E key.
-Pen Pressure
I consider 2048 the standard, but most claim to have 8192 at present. Most people cannot feel or see the differences between pen pressures above 1024 though so keep that in mind.
Extra Features:
-Pen Tilt/(Direction)/Rotation Sensitivity
Pen tilt and direction almost always come as a set, which is why direction is in brackets. The tilt reads the angle of the pen, and the direction reads which cardinal direction the pen is tilted. Pen rotation reads the rotation of the pen barrel itself. As far as I have seen, only Wacom has pen rotation (separate pen needed to be purchased for rotation).
-Shortcut Keys
I’m not the type to use the shortcut keys on my tablets, but many people need them, so how many shortcut keys there are on the tablet is listed. They are convenient when designed well, but most tablets have uncomfortable layouts or not enough shortcut keys.
-Multi-touch
If a tablet has multi-touch, it is noted as such. Most graphic tablets and drawing monitors do not have this feature. It is more common in pricey pen computer devices.
*I’m leaving out Program Compatibility because there are far too many programs to cover. Most “major” programs are said to work, but check with the company to make sure beforehand.
(Just to make it clear, this journal is made from my own experience and opinions, and although I do try to make sure I look at everything from many different views, I’m mostly biased towards the usefulness of the tablets with regards to anime style drawing in Clip Studio Paint.)
All tablet brands (that I have found)
Here is a list of all the brands I have found which sell tablets just in case you want to do your own research on them:
-Wacom
-Huion
-XP-Pen
-GAOMON
The following companies are separate because they were confusing, had bad reviews, or had some other reason which made them not worth considering.
Monoprice has a few tablets, but they are not a tablet specific company so their software can have many issues. The biggest problem is that they haven’t updated their drivers since 2013.
Turcom has options, but they are also not a tablet specific company so their products and drivers may not be as advanced. I don’t think they are worth considering compared to the other companies.
Fex Technology has bad reviews about its customer service, has basically no products, and they were so obscure it was really hard finding any information on them.
Adesso is overpriced for no apparent reason. They have a XP-Pen Star 03 look-alike which costs 50 USD more and their 22-inch drawing monitor costs way more than the other alternatives.
Bosstouch has some tablets that could be worth looking into, but there are far too few reviews to figure out whether they are trustworthy or not. You can also tell that their tablets are just rebrands of the tablets offered by Huion and XP-Pen, and the only difference is that the recharging pen is different.
PenPower offers some graphic tablets that seem good, but their prices are too high compared to the alternatives which are just as good in terms of specs. Perhaps their prices are lower in Asia.
Trust offers two graphic tablets and no drawing monitors. Both their tablets use battery powered pens. I do not think they are particularly worth mentioning.
iBall is a non-tablet specific company which only has old battery-powered pen tablets. Their site also does not list their prices. I do not think they are worth mentioning as tablet specific companies are most likely better in both tablet hardware and software.
Acepen is a very obscure tablet specific company which has no company site as far as I know of. This means that you have no access to updated drivers. The simple fact that you will not be able to get driver updates when Windows inevitably ruins WinTab functionality with feature updates is reason enough for me to keep Acepen off this list. (Edit: They now have a website, but the fact that they were selling products without a site is a problem. I will consider including them in the future when they solidify themselves as a trustworthy company.)
Bosto is a rather… interesting company. They were one of the better alternatives in the past, but they appear to have stagnated since. It is very difficult to find places to buy their tablets legitimately aside from on their site, and it appears frauds of their devices appear frequently online. I will be removing them from this list until they do something noteworthy.
Ugee was a fairly competitive company until the start of 2018. Now they are inactive in the North American market which is why they were removed from this list. They are currently working with XP-Pen.
Artisul was a somewhat competitive company, but issues with their tablets and drivers caused people to turn away from them at one point. Although they have released some new tablets, it is relatively unknown how good their new devices and drivers are with so little coverage to go off of.
Xencelabs is a new company which seems to be created by many veterans in the tablet field, such as developers with prior experience in Wacom and other such tablet companies. They have not yet released a drawing monitor to be included in this list.
Parblo is a relatively enthusiastic company, but their drivers and quality control have been lacking when I have tried their tablets. I will need to revisit their products in the future to see if they have improved enough to still be considered.
Yiynova is a relatively trusted company with older coverage on them being quite positive, however, it is difficult to find recent coverage on their products so their current state of affairs is difficult to assess. If I see positive coverage on their newer products, or if I get a chance to try their products myself, I will add them back to the list.
VEIKK appears to be a somewhat competent company if you go off of their high star ratings on Amazon, but my experience with the A50 was quite disappointing and I do not imagine their other products are much better. With that said, I need to revisit their products in the future to see if my experience was a one-time thing, but for now they are not included in this list.
Other art tablets/computers which I did not include in this journal:
-Microsoft Surface series
-Dell Canvas
-iPad Pro
My personal suggestions
These are just the tablets that I personally think are the most worthwhile Wacom alternative options in each category. I chose these based on value per dollar (compared to all other available tablets), how “new” they are (which means longer driver updates and support), and uniqueness of the tablet.
*I put (My review) beside the tablets that I actually own and drew on, the rest are my recommendations based on specs and other reviews. Aside from that, they’re in no particular order.
**If you need both pen tilt+rotation or multi-touch, to Wacom you go.
***If you know a good reason to take a tablet off this list, please inform me!
For Graphic Tablets, I recommend looking at:
-Huion H640P (My review)
-Huion H950P (My review)
-Huion H1060P (My review)
-Huion H1161
-Huion HS611
-Huion Keydial KD200
-XP-Pen Star G640 (My review)
-XP-Pen Star G640S
-XP-Pen Deco 03 (My review)
-XP-Pen Deco Pro S/M (My review)
–XP-Pen Deco Fun S/L
-Xencelabs Pen Tablet Medium
For Drawing Monitors, I recommend looking at:
-Wacom One
-Wacom Cintiq 16
-Huion Kamvas 12/13/16
-Huion Kamvas Pro 12
-Huion Kamvas Pro 13 (My review)
-Huion Kamvas Pro 16 (My review)
-Huion Kamvas 22 Plus
-XP-Pen Artist 13.3 Pro
-XP-Pen Artist 15.6 Pro (My review)
-XP-Pen Innovator 16
-XP-Pen Artist 22R Pro
-XP-Pen Artist 22 (2nd Generation)
-GAOMON PD1560
For Pen Computers, look at:
-2-in-1 computers and laptops. There’s no need to stick to Wacom for this kind of thing if you’re looking for a pen computer.
Recently, there have been a lot of computers coming out with pen input as a feature. The Microsoft Surface Pro, for instance, has a lot of good reviews. Well, I don’t have much research done on pen computers so you’re on your own for that.
*My personal experience with a Surface Pro 3 is that it has a ridiculously small amount of parallax, so the Microsoft Surface stuff is surely something worth looking at (but I absolutely hate the pen pressure of the Surface pen).
Wacom
Their Site: http://www.wacom.com/en-at
Their Store: Accessible from their site.
Driver Download Page: http://www.wacom.com/en/support/product-support/drivers
*But buy their products from your regions Amazon.com because Amazon has more sales than the main Wacom site.
Wacom is the leader in terms of graphic tablets and drawing monitors, so much so that we call any alternatives “Wacom alternatives”, but as you might already know, the prices they charge for their products are pretty high. I personally think that most people should not consider Wacom for their beginner tablets, and should only consider them for future “upgrades” to a Cintiq. However, even for future “upgrades”, people should only consider Wacom if they absolutely need the features offered exclusively by Wacom (such as multi-touch, pen tilt, and pen rotation).
Personal Notes
-If you do not absolutely need multi-touch/pen tilt/pen rotation on your tablet, then I suggest you avoid Wacom.
-They are the most secure when it comes to software compatibility, meaning that any program which has pen pressure should work with it. Alternative tablets work with most “major” programs, but if you know you use a “minor” program, you may want to consider Wacom.
-The majority of the time when I visit it, Wacom’s site is such a tragedy. Links that lead to nowhere, pages that don’t load, store links sending me from the NA site to the EU store… It’s horrendous, really. I honestly can’t believe this is the site for the leading tablet company.
Is Wacom worth looking at for drawing monitors?
-Maybe, but they’re not really compelling due to their high prices, unless you specifically need multi-touch/pen rotation.
Wacom Drawing Monitors
-Wacom Cintiq Series-
Wacom’s Cintiqs have been quite a few artists dreams for quite a long time now. However, those dreams are often shattered by their high prices.
I believe beginners and casual artists should look at alternatives instead of the Cintiqs if you’re very particular about wanting a drawing monitor but want to save money.
*There’s an option to pay the full price over the course of the year rather than up-front if you can’t pay for it in full right away. Go read about that on the Wacom site if you’re interested.
-Wacom One (13-inch)
Price: 399.95 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 11.6 x 6.5 inches, 13.3 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 72% NTSC on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 1 side button, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: None
Multi-touch: No
-Wacom Cintiq 16
Price: 649.95 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 13.6 x 7.6 inches, 15.6 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 72% NTSC on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, eraser on end
Pen Pressure: 8192, both pen tip and eraser
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: None, expresskey remote accessory sold separately
Multi-touch: None
Other features: Pen rotation (buy separate 100 USD pen)
-Wacom Cintiq 22
Price: 1199.95 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 18.7 x 10.5 inches, 21.5 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 72% NTSC on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, eraser on end
Pen Pressure: 8192, both pen tip and eraser
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: None, expresskey remote accessory sold separately
Multi-touch: None
Other features: Pen rotation (buy separate 100 USD pen)
-Wacom Cintiq Pro 24
Price: 1999.95 USD (No touch) Amazon.com
2499.95 USD (With touch) Amazon.com
Active Area: 20.55 x 11.57 inches, 23.6 inch diagonal
Resolution: UHD 3840 x 2160 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 99% Adobe RGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, eraser on end
Pen Pressure: 8192, both pen tip and eraser
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: None, expresskey remote accessory sold separately
Multi-touch: Optional
Other features: Optional Wacom Engine slot to make it a standalone tablet. Basically no parallax. Pen rotation (buy separate 100 USD pen)
-Wacom Cintiq Pro 32
Price: 3299.95 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 32 inch diagonal
Resolution: UHD 3840 x 2160 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 98% Adobe RGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, eraser on end
Pen Pressure: 8192, both pen tip and eraser
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: None, expresskey remote accessory sold separately
Multi-touch: Yes
Other features: Optional Wacom Engine slot to make it a standalone tablet. Basically no parallax. Pen rotation (buy separate 100 USD pen)
Huion
Their Site: http://www.huion.com/
Their Store: https://www.huiontablet.com/
Their Amazon Store: https://www.amazon.com/s?marketplaceID=ATVPDKIKX0DER&me=A30BRCK3LE6SB5&merchant=A30BRCK3LE6SB5&redirect=true
Driver Download Page: http://www.huion.com/download/driver/
*Note: The prices on Amazon are often lower than the prices they have listed on their main site, so I suggest buying from Amazon when ordering one of their tablets. The shipping speeds and return policy are also better on Amazon. I use the Amazon prices instead of the prices listed on their main site here wherever I find that it is lower.
Huion is one of the names you hear the most often when people talk about Wacom alternatives, and they have really come a long way over the last 3 years with the quality of their products. They used to only offer tablets which use recharging pens, but now they have quite a large selection of tablets which use battery-free pens instead.
Honestly, the success of Huion could be one of the main reasons why Wacom had to finally release a Cintiq with a much more affordable price.
If you want a good tablet, I can wholeheartedly recommend checking out Huion. (Check lots of reviews though because some of their products aren’t as good as the others.)
Personal Notes
-Huion is a fairly established company now, so they are quite trustworthy.
-Their older graphic tablets have lower build quality than their newer ones. To list most of them, I suggest avoiding their Huion 420, H420, 580, 680S, 680TF, H610, and H610 Pro as they are built to a lower standard than their more recent tablets.
-Their older monitors are cheaper because they use TN screens which are not ideal for art and colour reproduction. For this reason, I suggest avoiding their Huion GT-190, GT-190S, and GT-185SD.
-I have heard that the Huion GT-156HD v2 and Huion GT-191 often has problems with PaintTool SAI, but only SAI. There are also cases with Nvidia drivers messing up resolutions. Aside from those, I have not heard of any other “common” problems.
Is Huion worth looking at for drawing monitors?
-Yes. However, their older tablets should be avoided.
Huion Drawing Monitors
-Huion Kamvas 12
Price: 219.00 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 11.6 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 120% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: 8 buttons
Multi-touch: No
-Huion Kamvas Pro 12
Price: 229.99 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 11.6 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 120% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: 4 buttons, 1 touch bar
Multi-touch: No
Other features: Reduced parallax with a fully-laminated display.
-Huion Kamvas 13
Price: 259.00 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 11.5 x 6.5 inches, 13.3 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 120% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: 8 buttons
Multi-touch: No
-Huion Kamvas Pro 13
(My review: Huion Kamvas Pro 13 Review)
Price: 299.99 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 11.5 x 6.5 inches, 13.3 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 120% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: 4 buttons, 1 touch bar
Multi-touch: No
Other features: Reduced parallax with a fully-laminated display.
-Huion Kamvas 16 (2021)
Price: 402.00 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 13.5 x 7.6 inches, 15.6 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 100% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: 10 buttons
Multi-touch: No
-Huion Kamvas Pro 16
(My review: Huion Kamvas Pro 16 Review)
Price: 379.99 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 13.5 x 7.6 inches, 15.6 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 120% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: 6 buttons, touch strip
Multi-touch: No
Other features: Tablet stand included/not included depending on seller. Reduced parallax with a fully-laminated display.
-Huion Kamvas Pro 16 (4K)
Price: 829.00 USD Huion Store
Active Area: 13.5 x 7.6 inches, 15.6 inch diagonal
Resolution: UHD 3840 x 2160 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 120% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: None
Multi-touch: No
Other features: Reduced parallax with a fully-laminated display.
-Huion Kamvas Pro 16 Plus (4K)
Price: 899.00 USD Huion Store
Active Area: 13.5 x 7.6 inches, 15.6 inch diagonal
Resolution: UHD 3840 x 2160 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 145% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: None
Multi-touch: No
Other features: Reduced parallax with a fully-laminated display, Quantum Dot technology display featuring more vivid colours.
-Huion Kamvas 20
Price: 369.00 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 19.53 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 120% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: None
Multi-touch: No
-Huion Kamvas Pro 20 (2019)
*There is an older version of this tablet. Make sure you search with (2019) in your search.
Price: 599.00 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 19.53 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 120% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: 16 buttons, 2 touch bars
Multi-touch: No
-Huion Kamvas 22
Price: 449.00 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 18.7 x 10.5 inches, 21.5 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 120% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: None
Multi-touch: No
-Huion Kamvas 22 Plus
Price: 549.00 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 18.7 x 10.5 inches, 21.5 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 140% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: None
Multi-touch: No
Other features: Quantum Dot technology display featuring more vivid colours.
-Huion Kamvas Pro 22 (2019)
*There is an older version of this tablet. Make sure you search with (2019) in your search.
Price: 899.00 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 18.7 x 10.5 inches, 21.5 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 120% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: 20 buttons, 2 touch bars
Multi-touch: No
-Huion Kamvas Pro 24
Price: 809.99 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 20.74 x 11.67 inches, 23.8 inch diagonal
Resolution: QHD 2560 x 1440 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 120% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: 20 buttons, 2 touch bars
Multi-touch: No
XP-Pen
Their Site: http://www.xp-pen.com/
Their Store: http://www.storexppen.com/
Their Amazon Store: https://www.amazon.com/s?marketplaceID=ATVPDKIKX0DER&me=AABH22FTN87KM&merchant=AABH22FTN87KM&redirect=true
Driver Download Page: http://www.xp-pen.com/download/index.html
XP-Pen is an artist specific company which only makes artist supplies such as tablets and light pads. They are the only Wacom alternative that I have come across which offers battery-free pens consistently for all their graphic tablets. On the other hand, not all of their drawing monitors use battery-free pens though.
Personal Notes
-XP-Pen is fairly established company alongside Huion, so they are quite trustworthy.
-Their graphic tablets are all quite good and the “age” of each tablet is fairly easy to figure out as they are named in order from oldest to newest (ex. Star 03 is older than Star 04).
-Their drawing monitors are all quite respectable, but I have heard that the monitor colours are not very well calibrated out-of-the-box.
-XP-Pen is currently the only company which offers company-developed Linux drivers (still in beta testing). Wacom’s Linux drivers are community-developed, and are not actually official drivers, so XP-Pen is the first to do this.
Is XP-Pen worth looking at for drawing monitors?
-Yes.
XP-Pen Drawing Monitors
-XP-Pen Artist 12 Pro
Price: 299.99 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 10 x 5.7 inches, 11.6 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 72% NTSC on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: None
Shortcut Keys: 8 buttons, 1 red dial
Multi-touch: No
Other features: Single angle tablet stand included.
-XP-Pen Artist 13.3 Pro
Price: 299.99 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 11.75 x 6.75 inches, 13.3 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 123% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, levels unspecified
Shortcut Keys: 8 buttons, 1 red dial
Multi-touch: No
Other features: Single angle tablet stand included.
-XP-Pen Artist 15.6 Pro
(My review: XP-Pen Artist 15.6 Pro Review)
Price: 399.99 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 13.5 x 7.6 inches, 15.6 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 88% NTSC (120% sRGB) on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, levels unspecified
Shortcut Keys: 8 buttons, 1 physical wheel
Multi-touch: No
Other features: Single angle tablet stand included.
-XP-Pen Innovator 16
(My review: XP-Pen Innovator 16 Review)
Price: 529.99 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 13.5 x 7.6 inches, 15.6 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 125% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, levels unspecified
Shortcut Keys: 8 buttons, 1 physical wheel, 1 touch wheel
Multi-touch: No
-XP-Pen Artist 22 (2nd Generation)
Price: 499.99 USD XP-Pen Store
Active Area: 18.7 x 10.5 inches, 21.5 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 86% NTSC (122% sRGB) on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: +-60 degrees
Shortcut Keys: None
Multi-touch: No
-XP-Pen Artist 22R Pro
Price: 699.99 USD XP-Pen Store
Active Area: 18.7 x 10.5 inches, 21.5 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 88% NTSC (120% sRGB) on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 degrees
Shortcut Keys: 20 buttons, 2 physical wheels
Multi-touch: No
-XP-Pen Artist 24 Pro
Price: 899.99 USD XP-Pen Store
Active Area: 20.74 x 11.67 inches, 23.8 inch diagonal
Resolution: QHD 2560 x 1440 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 120% sRGB on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, +-60 levels
Shortcut Keys: 20 buttons, 2 physical wheels
Multi-touch: No
GAOMON
Their Site: http://www.gaomon.net/
Their Amazon Store: https://www.amazon.com/s?marketplaceID=ATVPDKIKX0DER&me=A25R223IRQIN3O&merchant=A25R223IRQIN3O&redir
Driver Download Page: http://www.gaomon.net/download/
GAOMON is a fairly new competitor in the tablet market, only recently releasing a few new graphic tablets and a single unique drawing monitor.
I previously only included GAOMON in the Intuos Alternatives list because they didn’t have any drawing monitors worth noting, but I am including them in this list now because of the success of their PD1560.
Personal Notes
-They are quite active on social media, and I believe the GAOMON PD1560 was quite a successful product.
Is GAOMON worth looking at for drawing monitors?
-Maybe.
GAOMON Drawing Monitors
-GAOMON PD1161
Price: 219.99 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 10.1 x 5.7 inches, 11.6 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 72% NTSC on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: None
Shortcut Keys: 8 buttons
Multi-touch: No
-GAOMON PD1220&1320
Price: Product Page
Active Area: 11.6 inch diagonal (PD1220)
13.3 inch diagonal (PD1320)
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 72% NTSC on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, levels unspecified
Shortcut Keys: None
Multi-touch: No
-GAOMON PD1560
Price: 329.99 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 11.8 x 7.5 inches, 15.6 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 72% NTSC on product page
Pen Type: Recharging
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: None
Shortcut Keys: 10 buttons
Multi-touch: No
-GAOMON PD1561
Price: 409.99 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 11.8 x 7.5 inches, 15.6 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 72% NTSC on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, levels unspecified
Shortcut Keys: 10 buttons
Multi-touch: No
-GAOMON PD156 Pro
Price: 369.00 USD Amazon.com
Active Area: 11.8 x 7.5 inches, 15.6 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 88% NTSC on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, levels unspecified
Shortcut Keys: 10 buttons, 1 physical wheel
Multi-touch: No
-GAOMON PD2200
Price: 439.00 USD Amazon.com (Unavailable on last check)
Active Area: 18.7 x 10.5 inches, 21.5 inch diagonal
Resolution: FHD 1920 x 1080 (16:9 ratio)
Display Type: IPS, gamut = 72% NTSC on product page
Pen Type: Battery-free
Pen Buttons: 2 side buttons, no eraser
Pen Pressure: 8192
Pen Tilt Sensitivity: Yes, levels unspecified
Shortcut Keys: 8 Touch Keys
Multi-touch: No
Journal Changelog
Last updated: May. 07, 2021
May. 07, 2021 -Removed Parblo and Yiynova from this list because I have seen any noteworthy improvements or coverage from them.
Jun. 08, 2019 -Removed Artisul from the list as they appear to be inactive and all their products are no longer available on Amazon.com.
May 01, 2019 -Chose to only list “base” prices and ignore sales as they change too often.
Jan. 27, 2019 -Removed Wacom Cintiq 13HD and 22HD as they are “older” devices. (Also because of lack of file size on DeviantArt Journal.)
Oct. 03, 2018 -Removed Ugee from this list as they appear to no longer be active in the North American market. It is possible they are still active in the Asian market, but I have no method of checking as I cannot read Chinese.
Aug. 18, 2018 -Included each products colour gamut as written on their product page.
Jun. 02, 2018 -Took Bosto off the list due to their long period of inactivity.
Apr. 19, 2018 -Personal Notes added regarding each tablet company.
Mar. 25, 2018 -Changed the term “passive” pen to “battery-free” pen as passive is a different touch technology.
Jan. 18, 2018 -Removed Monoprice as it is not competitive enough to be worth the risk.
Oct. 14, 2017 -Added the Display Type specification under each drawing monitor.
Oct. 12, 2017 -Added Driver Download Page links for each company.
Sep. 08, 2017 -Added GAOMON to the list.
July 24, 2017 -Added the new Huion Kamvas GT-221 Pro to the list.
July 21, 2017 -Moved this list from DeviantArt to WordPress.
May 08, 2017 -Parblo Mast10 added.
Mar. 27, 2017 -Removed Resolution (in LPI) because it is unintuitive and unnoticeable in basically all cases.
Mar. 07, 2017 -Added Yiynova tablets to the list.
Feb. 25, 2017 -Added the new XP-Pen Artist 16 tablet to the list.
Feb. 25, 2017 -Added a “Buy here” button to help people find where to buy the products.
Feb. 25, 2017 -Split journal for pen tablets and pen displays.
Feb. 24, 2017 -Added a table of contents for easier navigation.
Feb. 15, 2017 -Current Sales Worth Noting section added.
Feb. 14, 2017 -Parblo added to the list.
Please tell me in the comments if there are other tablet companies worth mentioning, and/or if you believe it’s worth making a section for one of the companies I considered as “not worth listing”.