🎶 Elevate Your Sound Experience!
The HccToo Music Player is a compact and portable MP3 player featuring 32GB of built-in flash memory, allowing you to store up to 5600 songs. With an impressive 45 hours of playback on a single charge, it supports a variety of audio formats and ensures you can enjoy your favorite tracks without interruption.
P**K
Great affordable device
We bought this for when I go into hospital as we always have to wait hours in the waiting room when I have to go there for my procedures. This little gadget looks great in matt black, feels quite soft and is really light. The good thing about this is that there is a Tetris like game installed on it and you can watch clips, movies on the screen. It is 32 GB so you can store plenty of music, photos, videos and perhaps a movie on it. The display is clear and the installed clips from tom and jerry play fine, there is no lag. The earphones provided aren't the best ones but are still pretty good considering they come with the device with no extra cost. The different programs are easy to go through, I did not even have to look at the leaflet provided. It also comes with a USB charging cable witch I prefer to batteries anyways. I can only recommend this little device, when you go on holiday this will definitely keep your kids busy without it draining their precious smart phones whilst listening to their favourite songs. We easily added songs via our laptop onto the music player. I hope my review helps you in any way. Thank you ❤️
A**M
Cheap as chips, better than chips. (do not eat mp3 player)
Have only been using this for a few days so can't comment on longevity of the device, but I am very pleased with it so far. It feels far more solid than other mp3 players I've had at this price point, and is 32GB which is far more memory than I have previously had for £20-30. It isn't expandable, but 32GB is plenty for my needs.I thought I should point out, I noticed a lot of reviews saying it is hard to transfer music onto the device. Maybe those reviewers are used to some iTunes-like 'middle man' program, but getting music onto the HccToo is super easy. It functions as any other memory device, if you've used a USB stick or an external hard drive, you know how to use this player.As others have said the menu feels a little clunky, but I've already got used to it. In the 'music' section of the menu, it does rather annoyingly alphabetise everything, but going to 'file' instead of music brings up all your folders and files exactly as you copied them on, so you can listen in the intended order.Over all a fantastic bit of kit for a tiny price. I'm using overhead headphones now but the in ears supplied were actually surprisingly high quality. I've had many 'free' headphones which have felt like they were from a christmas cracker, these ones weren't amazing but I would actually be able to comfortably wear them for a decent amount of time and they sounded fine for a cheap pair.The radio and video are serviceable for sure, the video actually looked surprisingly good but not sure I'll use them much. Not sure why all cheap mp3 players have an e-book reader thing... noone is going to read war and peace on a tiny screen...But yeah, if you're considering one, just buy it. I doubt you'll find better for the money!
T**D
Decent sound quality for the price but a confusing UI and file structure
Bit of a mixed bag this one - on one hand it is cheap and it works, sound quality is decent and the battery is pretty good too but there's a few annoying niggles that are a bit frustrating.So first things first - it's a small and neat little player but it does feel a little flimsy in the hand as it's so light. The display is fine, and despite it offering a "!movie" playback section I can't see many people wanting to watch anything on a screen that's approximately 4cm by 3cm! However if you did want to watch the latest Hollywood blockbuster on a display barely bigger than a postage stamp this little device has you covered - good luck with that. I did test it with some video for the review and it's OK, the colours looked a little washed out to me but for a few minutes viewing it would be adequate.It's comes with a USB lead and a pair of cheap white earphones, which I didn't use as I have some decent Dennon ones of my own. There is a manual which is pretty basic with some Chinglish translation but it's fairly simple to figure out how to operate it.On to music then, which is it's main role. Firstly it charges via a standard phone socket (micro usb), which is handy. The battery charges up fairly quickly and lasts a good while too so you'll probably only need to charge it every other day or so even with fairly high usage, depending on how long your commute is. They expect you to have an actual charger as they just supply the USB lead, so bear that in mind. Sound quality is absolutely fine, surprising good actually, and it supported all the formats I threw at it (MP3, WAV, FLAC and more)The user interface is just about passable but certainly not completely logical, and the buttons don't work as you'd expect and you'll find yourself having to press the UP key when the middle OK button, as used on numerous other devices, would have been the much more logical choice. It doesn't take too long to get used to though but still I've lost count of the number of times I've pressed what should be the "UP" button to find I'm pressing OK instead. There's a rudimentary spectrum analyser type display when playing a song which is fine but overall it's not the most modern looking thing though and feels a little bit clunky in operation.The bad bit then, as others have said the filing structure used is a bit weird. Well, a lot weird really. My files don't appear where I'd expect under "albums" or "artists" etc - it seems to ignore my mp3 tags, so instead I end up going to the "NAVI" section which is a file manager type thing similar to say windows employer which just lists the folders I created. I'm guessing there's someway to force a scan for it to read the tags but reading other reviews maybe not? It wasn't a bit issue for me but it might be for others.So a quick rundown then...Pros:CheapSmallLightDecent sound quality (with my own headphones, not the cheapo bundled ones)Supports lots of file formats (even FLAC)Cons:Outdated and slightly confusing UI will frustrate you a littleWeird tag/file ordering systemBit flimsy feelingIs it worth the money? Probably just about but I do suspect there's probably better alternatives out for the same sort of money but it'll do me for now.
A**E
Three Stars
Nice mp3 player, food sound but cant make own playlist as stated
C**S
Not dependable.
This broke with 36 hours of use. It kept on dropping the USB connection and having tried other devices, all these worked well. Then after reconnecting, I could not delete or add files to the device and my laptop showed there were no files on the device even though I had downloaded about 10GB of MP3s. The connection after about 3 minutes dropped again. I tried other USB devices in both slots and all others worked with no problem. There was a constant reminder to scan the device for corrupted files which I did each time the device was reconnected. This also stopped working.The instruction book is poor and has no relevant instructions on solving problems encountered other than turning the device off or on. The item is of appalling quality and felt cheap and nasty. Generally a frustrating experience after spending 2 days ripping and converting CDs to MP3s.
Trustpilot
3 days ago
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