Display
The new iPad screen gets an increase to 10.2-inches — a small but noticeable improvement that brings it much closer to the 10.5-inch iPad Air and older iPad Pro models. The most useful advantage of this is that the extra screen real estate makes for a more natural on-screen typing experience. This also naturally boosts the resolution to 2160 x 1620, but that’s just to make up for the increased size; the pixel density remains the same at 264 ppi.
However, other than the increase in size, the new iPad doesn’t gain any other screen improvements. Unlike the iPad Air, there’s no True Tone or P3 wide color gamut here, and the maximum brightness also remains the same. It’s the same iPad screen we’ve had for years — just slightly bigger.