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The 6-Inch E-Reader That Runs Android and Now Takes a Stylus

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Boox Go 6 Gen II E-Book ReaderMost e-readers are designed around a single concession: you trade control for simplicity. You get a clean, distraction-free reading experience, and in return the device tells you which apps you can run, which store you can buy from, and what you’re allowed to do with your own content. Boox has spent years building against that assumption. The Go 6 Gen II is the latest evidence that the trade-off isn’t necessary. It’s just the default.

Price: $199.99
Where to Buy: Boox

At $199.99, the second-generation Go 6 arrives with the two upgrades that exposed the original’s limits most clearly: 3GB of RAM instead of 2GB, and full support for Boox’s InkSense Plus stylus. Pre-orders are open now from the US store ($189 from the Hong Kong warehouse), with a magnetic case included and a stylus bundle at $232.99. Shipping is expected to begin around June 17, 2026.



What the Gen II changes

The original Boox Go 6 shipped with 2GB of RAM paired with a 2.0GHz octa-core chip. That was fine for turning pages in Kindle or Boox’s own reader app, but it struggled if you tried to run multiple Android apps or flip between a browser and a note-taking tool. The Gen II keeps the same CPU but bumps RAM to 3GB, which should make side-by-side apps far more usable.Boox Go 6 Gen II E-Book Reader

Storage stays at 32GB, but the microSD card slot carries over so you can expand locally. The OS is still Android 11, so you get the same Google Play access and app compatibility as before. Boox also kept the dual-tone front light with warm and cold settings. The unit weighs 160g, a touch heavier than the original’s 146g, and comes in four new colors with what Boox calls a suitcase-inspired back texture: Plum, Stone, Shell, and Custard.

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Design and displayBoox Go 6 Gen II E-Book Reader

The screen is the same 6-inch HD ePaper panel at 300 pixels per inch. That resolution is still the standard for pocketable e-readers in 2026, and text should look sharp at normal reading distances. The AG glass flat cover lens keeps glare under control without adding bulk. At 6.8 millimeters thick, it still sits comfortably in a jacket pocket, a size we also appreciated on the Boox Palma 2.




Stylus support and the microSD slot

Most e-readers under $200 treat a stylus as an afterthought, if they support one at all. The Go 6 Gen II works with the Boox InkSense Plus, an active pen with fine pressure sensitivity that charges over USB-C. That means you can annotate PDFs, sketch diagrams, or take handwritten notes directly on the 6-inch screen. It’s a feature we liked on the larger Boox Note Air3, and seeing it on a 6-inch device changes how you might use the Go 6 Gen II. The stylus is sold separately or as part of the $232.99 bundle, so factor that in if pen input is your main reason to upgrade.Boox Go 6 Gen II E-Book Reader

The microSD slot is equally practical. You can load EPUB and PDF libraries without eating into internal storage, or keep offline maps and documents for travel. Bluetooth and Wi-Fi come standard, so tethering to a phone or pairing wireless headphones should be straightforward. The USB-C port also supports OTG.

Pricing and lineup context

At $199.99, the Gen II sits about $50 above the original Go 6 (still listed at $149.99), while remaining below the larger Go 7. The Gen II adds stylus support in a smaller, lighter body than the Go 7, though the Go 7 still leads on RAM (4GB vs 3GB) and battery. We liked the Boox Page 7 when we reviewed it, and it remains a solid step-up if you need more screen.

Boox is one of the few makers shipping full Android on a 6-inch device, and the Gen II doubles down on that with Google Play support and a stylus. The bet is that readers want a pocketable tablet rather than a locked-down book reader. We won’t know if the hardware can cash that check until we spend real time with one, but on paper the Gen II makes a stronger case than the original.




What we don’t know yet

The 1500mAh battery is the same capacity as the original. We can’t confirm whether the extra GB of RAM and the stylus digitizer will shorten real-world endurance. Water resistance is also an open question; the product page mentions no IP rating, so we’re assuming the Gen II has none.Boox Go 6 Gen II E-Book Reader

One more detail Boox hasn’t clarified: whether original Go 6 cases will fit the Gen II. The dimensions are nearly identical at 149 by 109 by 6.8 millimeters, but a fraction of a millimeter difference can break case compatibility. We’ll update this post once Boox confirms.

Who should pre-order and who should wait

If you already own the original Boox Go 6 and find the performance acceptable, the Gen II is a modest upgrade rather than a must-have. The RAM bump and stylus support matter most to power users who run multiple apps or annotate documents daily. Casual readers may not notice the difference.

If you’re new to Boox and want the smallest full-Android e-reader the company makes, the Gen II looks like the obvious choice. The extra $50 appears to buy you future-proofing the first generation lacked. That said, anyone on the fence should wait for hands-on reviews before committing.




Price: $199.99
Where to Buy: Boox

Boox has taken its most pocketable e-reader and added the two features users asked for most: more memory and pen input. For the right reader, the Go 6 Gen II looks like the most capable 6-inch Android ePaper device available in 2026, pending hands-on testing.



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