The Amazon Kindle Scribe Colorsoft, arriving in the UK on 10 December 2025, marks a major step forward for Amazon’s e-ink line. After years of monochrome screens, the new Coloursoft display finally brings colour to the Kindle Scribe range — and with it, a whole new set of possibilities for readers, students, professionals and digital creatives. This blog post takes a deep dive into the design, writing experience, colour display quality, performance, pros, cons and who the Colorsoft is best suited for.

First Impressions
The moment you pick up the Scribe Colorsoft, it feels premium. It’s thin, light and beautifully balanced, making it ideal for long reading or writing sessions. The addition of colour transforms how notes, highlights and diagrams look — not in a bright tablet-like way, but in a calming, paper-friendly palette that’s easy on the eyes.
The Coloursoft Display – What’s New?
The Coloursoft display is built on E-Ink Kaleido technology, offering soft, pastel-style colours. It’s perfect for:
- Colour-coded revision notes
- Diagrams and charts
- Children’s books
- Cookbooks and craft guides
- Sketching and creative planning
You won’t get the punchy brightness of an LCD or OLED tablet — but that’s the point. This is a paper-like experience, not a screen competing for your attention. Black text stays clear enough for comfortable reading, though it is slightly softer than on a Paperwhite or Oasis.
Writing Experience – The Best Kindle Yet
This is where the Kindle Scribe Colorsoft truly shines. The refined writing experience brings:
- Lower latency for smooth pen strokes
- A beautifully paper-like texture on the glass
- Multiple pen colours and tools to choose from
- Improved palm rejection
- Better performance when marking up complex PDFs
For revision notes, document markup, sketching, colour-coded planning or bullet journalling, the experience feels closer to real paper than most digital devices.
Performance & Software
Under the hood, the new quad-core processor and increased RAM make everything feel snappier. Page turns are quicker, syncing is smoother and large files behave much better. You still get all the classic Kindle strengths:
- Weeks of battery life
- Cloud integration via Google Drive and OneDrive
- Access to the full Kindle Store
- A totally distraction-free workspace
It’s simple by design, keeping you focused on reading, writing or studying — not apps or notifications.
What the Kindle Scribe Colorsoft Does Brilliantly
- Introduces colour without losing the calming e-ink feel
- Amazon’s best writing experience so far
- Large 11-inch screen ideal for textbooks and PDFs
- Perfect for students, teachers, creatives and professionals
- Excellent lighting and battery life
- Great for diagrams, sketches and colour highlights
Where It Falls Short
- Colours remain muted compared to tablets
- Text sharpness slightly reduced versus monochrome Kindles
- Resolution drops in colour mode
- More expensive than non-colour Kindles
- Not ideal for graphic-heavy comics or fast-refresh content
Who Should Buy It?
Fantastic for:
- Secondary and university students
- Teachers, tutors and academics
- People who work heavily with PDFs or reports
- Digital planners and creative thinkers
- Sketchers and diagram-lovers
Not ideal for:
- Novel-only readers
- Users expecting tablet-level colour vibrancy
- Anyone wanting apps, video or browsing
Final Verdict
The Amazon Kindle Scribe Colorsoft is the most exciting Kindle release in years. It doesn’t try to replace a tablet — instead, it offers a beautifully focused, paper-like space for reading, studying, planning and creating. With colour support, improved writing tools and a refined design, it’s a superb choice for anyone wanting a distraction-free digital notebook and colour reader in one.
For students, professionals and creatives, it’s absolutely worth considering when it launches in the UK on 10 December 2025.
Discover more from 5 things to do today
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
I think you will find that it was NOT released in the UK on Dec 10th.
I agree there seems to be conflicting dates. The world awaits!