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🎵 Your ultimate music hub—stream, store, and vibe without limits!
The innioasis 160GB MP3 Player is a powerhouse Android-based music device featuring a 4-inch IPS touchscreen, 8-core processor, and 2GB RAM for smooth performance. It supports major streaming apps like Spotify, Pandora, and Amazon Music via dual-band WiFi, while Bluetooth 4.2 ensures stable wireless audio connections. With 160GB internal plus 128GB SD card storage and expandable memory up to 1TB, it’s perfect for managing vast music collections. Parental controls and app customization make it ideal for kids and adults seeking a phone-free, dedicated music experience.










| ASIN | B0C5T1JGRS |
| Additional Features | Equalizer, FM Radio, Touch Screen, Video Playback, Voice Recorder |
| Battery Average Life | 1 days |
| Best Sellers Rank | #2,852 in Electronics ( See Top 100 in Electronics ) #7 in MP3 Players |
| Brand | innioasis |
| Built-In Media | Earbuds, USB Cable, User Manual, Memory Card (possibly) |
| Color | Black |
| Colour | Black |
| Compatible Devices | Car Audio System, Earphone, Headphone, Laptop, Personal Computer, Speaker |
| Component Type | Memory |
| Connectivity Technology | Aux, Bluetooth, USB |
| Connectivity technology | Aux , Bluetooth, USB |
| Country of Origin | China |
| Customer Reviews | 3.8 out of 5 stars 2,204 Reviews |
| Display Technology | IPS |
| Item Dimensions D x W x H | 1D x 6.2W x 11H centimeters |
| Item Weight | 128 Grams |
| Manufacturer | INNIOASIS |
| Memory Storage Capacity | 160 GB |
| Memory storage capacity | 160 GB |
| Mfr Part Number | G3 |
| Model Name | G3 |
| Model Number | G3 |
| Model name | G3 |
| Screen Size | 4 Inches |
| Special features | Equalizer , FM Radio, Touch Screen, Video Playback , Voice Recorder |
| Supported Media Type | Micro SD, SD Card |
| Supported Standards | MP3, WAV, FLAC, AAC, APE, OGG, M4A, WMA, MP2 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | ONE YEAR WARRANTY |
M**.
Para quem quer aceder a Apple música sem outras redes sociais 👍🏼
Não queríamos oferecer um iPod que era caro e não o queríamos colocar nas redes sociais (Whatsapp e YouTube). Como é um leitor que dá para remover essas APPs foi a melhor opção!
M**D
Très bon
Fonctionne tel que décrit. Pour ma part, je l'utilise surtout pour diffuser de la musique dans la voiture (avec connexion filaire ou Bluetooth). Précisions supplémentaires : 1) important d'avoir des fichiers enregistrés avec un son élevé, car la commande de volume de l'appareil n'a pas d'amplification, i.e., il n'y a aucune augmentation du son au-delà de celui du fichier (natif). Donc, si le son de votre fichier est faible, il va le rester. La commande de volume est donc toujours au maximum. 2) les menus sont parfois petits pour un écran tactile. Cela dit, ça se gère. 3) l'ajustement avec le petit égalisateur est difficile Une fois ces précisions apportées, c'est franchement un très bon (et bel) appareil, facile d’utilisation (interface claire), belle qualité de son, avec Android comme SE, contenant toutes les fonctions attendues d'un lecteur MP3 standard, grande capacité de stockage. Il lui reste à passer le test de la durabilité.
J**K
For music and reading lovers out there!
My 12 year old girl loves it! She listens to Spotify music and also used it for audio story books!
B**N
Excellent quality and user experience.
I am a little "old school" I guess and still find myself appreciating the ability to carry around MY song preferences and not need to rely on an internet connection for streaming as well as suffer the shortened battery life that constant "over the air" (internet) transmissions require of independent or stand alone devices. I also prefer not to drain my phone battery with MP3 playback, having a dedicated player is still my preferred choice. This Innioasis MP3 Player sports a clear 3" screen and a generous storage allotment of 160GB, internal storage, which is literally 1000s of songs. It is relatively compact and not heavy to carry around. This device is decidedly capable and handles much like older generation phones. In fact, it feels a little like using an early version of an iPhone. If you are more familiar with that style of navigation (or Android style experience) , then are no surprises here, it is straight forward. Navigating is done through the capacitive touch on the very durable screen. I am not sure that it is "Gorilla glass" but it is definitely solid and scratch resistant. The home screen displays such items as "Now Playing", "Music", "Audio Books", "Photos", "FM Radio", "Settings", "internet browser" and "video player", to mention but a few. As for the musical playback, it is very good in sound quality with a 9 preset equalizer (Normal, Classical, Dance, Flat, Heavy Metal, Hip Hop, Jazz, Pop, Rock), I found them all more similar than I would have hoped but there is enough of a difference to make cycling through them, a worthwhile affair. The Heavy Metal preset is the one that injects the most bass into the sound, providing some excellent body to the music. I leave it on all the time, regardless of genre. The bottom of the player is equipped with a usb-C port, as well as a 3.5mm headphone jack which is needed as it acts as an antenna when using the FM radio. This is true of any MP3 player that also hosts an FM radio feature. Headphones DO come with this purchase. The display is very functional, bright and clean to view. Many players in this price range offer a rather low pixelated resolution on their display, which is a real negative in this day and age but this one is very nice to view for internet usage, e-reading or video viewing. There is also microSD expansion slot on this model but at 160GB of memory and the average high quality MP3 file ranging from 1.8MB - 3.2MB,there is alot of storage here. Never the less, additional storage is always a bonus. "On power" turns in consistent 4-5 hrs times for me, dependent on screens brightness, Bluetooth activation or constant screen viewing times. Charging via the USB is around an hour (+). Overall, I think this is a reqlly decent player with a great form factor and excellent build quality as well as rich feature list. with enough in the way of features and functionality to make it a worthwhile choice. Definitely Recommended.
G**A
Probably the best value in an MP3 player.
UPDATE: I've had this unit since July of 2025, it's currently April of '26, not one issue. It simply performs well whether it's in my car or using it somewhere else. I finally started using Bluetooth headphones along with my always wired output to my car, and though others have apparently had wireless difficulty, I have had nothing but success. I purchased a Bluetooth wireless remote control for this player to give me steering wheel controls, and the setup works flawlessly! The control was asin number B0DC685617, "Bluetooth media button remote control" by a company called "GLOBELEC". I left a review of that product as well. Place the control on the BACK - SIDE of a steering wheel spoke where your fingers naturally fall and you get unobtrusive buttons to control the player. The connection to the control will eventually timeout, so I have the Bluetooth connection screen from settings always active and simply hit the little square "recent apps" button to quickly access the connect screen. Tap it twice again and I'm back to the music. Read on for my original review... I use this player mostly in my car, as I like my phone to do “phone things” and not be tied up with music. If you are looking to do the same, read on as I will give you my tricks and tips for this unit, which is an excellent media player for your car (or anywhere, really) if you set it up correctly. I have vehicles that HAVE very good aftermarket stereos, but after getting this new version of the Innioasis player, I am thinking about using one in all of my cars, as this unit gives capabilities you can’t get without spending a ton of money, like a customizable 10 band equalizer AS WELL AS a customizable 10 band PARAMETRIC EQ with Q settings. Digital signal processors for car audio that do the same thing are about $300, and this comes with one built-in. I had a previous generation of this Innioasis MP3 player and was impressed with its performance and features, but a few things annoyed me. This was entirely because of the version of HiByMusic it came with, NOT the player itself. With this new version of HiBy 4.3.1, I have almost no complaints. The only thing I wish it did was give me steering wheel controls using USB tethering, as my phone is connected via bluetooth. I have the player magnetically mounted within finger reach of my steering wheel, so honestly, it’s not that much of a drawback. The hardware itself is top-notch, and I can think of nothing to gripe about there. My old unit lasted nearly 2 years in my vehicle, but finally died as the battery swelled up and popped the screen out. Considering I left it in the car year-round, baking in the heat and freezing in the winter (I won’t do that to my new one), I’m very happy with it’s longevity. Like most techie things, taking some time to experiment and learn what the unit does will pay off later. This is a VERY good player. Quality hardware coupled with an intuitive user interface that can be customized to the users liking. After my experience with my last Innioasis player, and testing of this new one, I simply cannot see why anyone would NOT like these players. One of my biggest annoyances with my previous version of this player was that the text was so small as to be very difficult to read without glasses. This version fixed it: simply set font size to “Largest” in the unit’s system settings (Settings/Display/Font Size), then in HiBy settings, choose “System Defined” as your font size (HiBy Settings/Font size settings). This made the song titles and other things actually readable while driving, and honestly it’s a whole lot easier on the eyes even if you aren’t using the player in your car. Having set this parameter so you can actually see the thing, here are some other HiBy settings I find very useful, for driving or any other use. This is written with tablet novices in mind... TRACK TRANSITIONS: I set mine to gapless, as I have many albums that one song flows right into the next one. Most music will have some silence at the beginning and end anyway, unless one track flows right into the next. This will let more of your music sound like you expect. I have aftermarket head units that will not let you choose this simple feature. DRIVING FRIENDLY MODE: You don’t need to be driving to appreciate this one. Turning this ON will allow the system “Back” arrow to be used to help navigate folders and playlists in HiBy. Just turn it on, you’ll be happy you did. PLAY THROUGH FOLDERS: Personally I prefer this as this will allow you to continue on to the next album in a folder and keep the music going. My music is arranged in folders by GENRE, ARTIST, then ALBUM. Any miscellaneous songs I may have by that artist are just sitting “loose” in the ARTIST folder. This makes for probably the easiest way to find your music. “Play through folders” continues playing alphabetically through all folders after finishing the songs in the folder you started with. OTHER SETTINGS: You can change the color of the HiBy app in the “Custom themes” menu. I find black to be the best for the car, particularly at night, but experiment to see what suits you. By the way, if you are driving at night and the screen is too bright, the “Night Light” feature of the Android system may be useful – adjust it to your liking in settings, then activating it can be as simple as one swipe downward from the top of the unit and hitting the little crescent moon icon. You can even schedule it to activate at night. If you don’t like the yellowish cast it creates, swiping downward TWICE will let you easily access the screen brightness setting, and just tap anywhere on the slider to position it. Easy to do while driving with minimal distraction. You can change the order of the items in the “menu bar”, the bar that contains “Album”, “Folder”, “Artist”, etc. (also works in the playlist menu bar). Click the drop down arrow on the right side of the bar and you will be presented with a list of possible sort options. While this allows you to choose how you sort music, you can also tap and hold a particular item, then re-arrange it, thus changing the order on the bar. I prefer to have “Folder” show up first on the bar as that is how I typically want to see things. I cleaned up the desktop area of the unit by combining all the apps except “Music” and “Settings” into a common folder (tap and hold an icon, then move it on top of another icon, repeating as desired). Then, tap and hold the “Music” icon, and a menu will appear. At the top of this menu will be an icon with four little boxes – click that button and you will be presented with an option to create a “Widget”. Touch and hold the menu then drag to the desktop. This makes a functioning “Player widget” as well as creates a nice big target of an icon to tap while you are driving, should you ever end up outside of the app. I placed mine at the top of the screen, the “Music” and “Settings” icons as well as the folder containing all the other apps at the bottom of the screen. A ten band equalizer is accessible from the main playing screen by tapping the three vertical dots at the top-right of the screen. You can now save your own EQ settings as presets that you can name, and access them from the first button on the left of the EQ screen. There is a reset button at the top of the screen as well, allowing you to quickly “zero” all the sliders and start over. HiBy also has a ten band PARAMETRIC EQ located in the main settings (Look for “PEQ” just below the “Equalizer” settings). This is a very powerful tool...set up correctly, you can fine tune your audio to compensate for acoustic deficiencies in your vehicle or its speakers. This is expert level, and if you don’t understand it, just leave it alone. Bottom line, this is a tremendous value added to the system. Playlists are easy to create and manage as well. Be sure to backup your playlists...I didn’t, but was lucky enough to get my old unit powered up. HiBy was able to export and properly import a relative path M3U file from my old player. Exporting a playlist can be done by going to your playlists, long-pressing the playlist you wish to backup and selecting one of the backup options. There is a “Mandatory landscape” mode in HiBy settings/HiByMusic Laboratory, if you want everything oriented that direction. If the player ever dies, you can pry up the screen to get to the micro-sd card that holds all of the information and music you have. I always keep my music on an external micro-sd card, so I never have to worry about loosing it if the unit dies. Even so, when it does finally quit, there’s a memory card in there if you want one. Consider getting the pack of tempered glass screen protectors the company also sells. Easy to apply and saves on scratches and cracking. Moving mine around as I do, I managed to crack my glass... thankfully it's just the protection screen. When it gets really annoying, I'll just pry it off an put on the spare that came in the pack. That’s it. If you want one, buy this one. I doubt you can do any better, even for MORE money. P.s., I finally CORRECTLY organized all of the ID3 tags in my mp3 collection, getting EVERY file in an album and tidying up all that data. When all of that is done correctly, searching my files is not only breeze, but I now have created my own radio stations (essentially) by simply playing a genre and hitting the shuffle button. If you haven't done this with your collection, get the free application "Mp3Tag" to make the job easy. I wound up consolidating some genres for my own taste, keeping artists in VERY broadly defined genres, but it makes it workable.
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