Wacom Bamboo Fun Review
Wacom Bamboo Fun Review from Meghan. Good tablet but not for everyone, I spent quite a bit of time looking at various tablets, reading reviews, and trying to figure out which had the most bang for the buck; the Bamboo Fun won in just about every category. Please note that I am not a professional graphic artist, just a hobbyist (though technically savvy enough to understand the features [eg pressure sensitivity]), so I’m reviewing it from that perspective.
Installation was a snap. Download the latest drivers from the Wacom site, plug it into a USB port, and you’re all set. I tried it out on two laptops and a desktop and installation was flawless on each.
The tablet is thin and light, with a more-than-adequate amount of active space (I wanted something that would let me do longer strokes without feeling cramped). The multi-touch capability is really nice with graphics programs that support it; being able to pan and zoom with my left hand while my right remains mostly dedicated to drawing is great (and a quick press of one of the Bamboo’s 4 buttons will turn touch off, which comes in handy [no pun intended]). For reference, the touch-sensitive area is 7.5″ x 5.1″ and the pen-active area is a fairly generous 8.5″ x 5.4″. You can configure it for left-handed use (lefties rejoice!).
The tablet is very smooth and responsive with Sketchbook Pro and ArtRage 2.5. I wasn’t that thrilled with Corel Painter 4 Essentials, which comes bundled with it; the UI was clunky and not very intuitive (spend the $20 on ArtRage instead – you won’t regret it). The Bamboo Fun also comes bundled with Photoshop Essentials, which should be useful if you don’t already have a full version of Photoshop.
The battery-less pen, with two configurable buttons and 1024 levels of pressure sensitivity, is very comfortable in the hand and I admit it, I love the eraser on the end.
The tablet has a fabric loop on one side for holding the pen when transporting it.
The tablet comes with three extra nibs and an extraction tool, which isn’t listed in the product description.
Overall, for a couple of steps above entry level I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend the Bamboo Fun as a great tablet for the price.
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Tags: Artrage, Capability, Drawing, Fabric Loop, Graphics Programs, Hobbyist, Laptops, Left Hand, Perspective, Pressure Sensitivity, Professional Graphic Artist, Pun, Reading Reviews, Sensitive Area, Sketchbook Pro, Snap, Strokes, Ui, Usb Port, Zoom


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