

It also housed extra nibs, nib remover and all the necessary dongles to connect the tablet to any device. The tablet also came with a high-quality magnetic case that housed not one but two pens!! A thick one with three buttons and a thin, more normal pen like one with two buttons. The quality of the bag alone was impressive. I did not expect that from a brand that I had never heard of before. It also comes with a high-quality bag to house the tablet as well as a drawing glove. The tablet is packed really nicely in the box. Xencelabs blew my visual expectations out of the water. I was blown away when I first opened the box. In my mind, it needed to compete with my tablets that I have been emotionally attached to for years.

I got my hands on their medium tablet, which as of when I am writing this review, is cheaper than Wacom's medium-sized tablet.īefore I even opened the box, I had really high standards for the product. I had no idea who they were or what they were about, but I was very intrigued. Xencelabs seemed to show up out of nowhere on the market. This might have finally changed with the sudden arrival of Xencelabs. I knew that even though they were very expensive, I would get a product that was reliable and would get the job done. As an artist myself, those were the only two brands I would trust with my hard-earned money. For the longest time, the digital art space has been dominated by two products and two products only: Wacom tablets and iPad Pros.
