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This tabelt has to be connected to the computer and there are multiple drawing platforms that are free like sketchbook
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.That's a complicated answer. The best on the market for full drawing tablets is a MobileStudio Pro. It costs an arm and a leg so maybe not what a 14 year old should get as their first tablet. iPads nowadays are getting better but essentially no-wire tablets are laptop level stuff. As for programs, that depends as well. There's loads of free software out there with Sketchbook being completely free on Autodesk now and usable cross-platform with an account. Most new tablets come with a trial software or built-in as well depending on the kind). A drawing tablet standalone you're looking anywhere from 1500 to 3000 easy. That's on the Wacom end at least, but then there's the cheaper versions of Wacom for nearly the same amount of ability: Huion. I am unsure if they have a standalone, but they're usually a third or half the price of Wacom. Lots of people debate in quality drop but my roommate and I swap our Huion and Wacoms back and forth with little issue. If she absolutely adores and is drawing 24/7 you'll want to get her something that lasts a while. If she's more casual about it, maybe give her a lesser quality tablet and have her learn what she likes and doesn't like before you spend a bunch on something huge. Hope this helps!
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