The SuperBox S7 Max launched in September 2025 as the mid-tier model in the S7 lineup, sitting between the S7 Pro ($359) and the S7 Ultra ($449). The price difference between the Pro and the Max is $40. The hardware difference is exactly one thing: storage.
If you already know you want a SuperBox S7 and you’re deciding between models, that’s the entire comparison in two sentences. The rest of this post covers what 64GB versus 32GB actually means in practice, what the S7 Max shares with every other S7 model, and the two specific buyer profiles where the Max is clearly the right pick.
S7 Max specs
| Spec | S7 Max |
|---|---|
| Processor | Quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 |
| RAM | 4GB DDR |
| Storage | 64GB eMMC |
| OS | Android 12 |
| Resolution | Up to 6K Ultra HD |
| WiFi | Dual-band WiFi 6 (2T2R) |
| Ethernet | 1000Mbps |
| Bluetooth | Yes (voice remote) |
| USB | Yes |
| HDMI | Yes |
| Time Shift | 7-day |
| Color | Blue |
| Remote | Standard (non-backlit) |
What every S7 model shares
The S7 lineup — Pro, Max, Ultra, Prime — runs on the same Quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 processor with 4GB of RAM across all variants. Streaming performance, channel loading speed, 6K playback, and app responsiveness are identical across the lineup. The performance upgrade between S6 and S7 is meaningful; the performance difference between S7 Pro, Max, and Ultra is not.
Every S7 model ships with:
- Blue TV (2,000+ live channels, updates every 12 hours)
- Blue VOD (10,000+ on-demand titles, updated daily)
- Android 12 with Google Play access
- WiFi 6 with dual-band support
- 1000Mbps ethernet port
- 7-day Time Shift (access content from the past 7 days without recording)
- Voice remote with Google Assistant-style search
- Redesigned S7 interface with gray and black theme, new filters, and improved navigation
The full channel breakdown for all S7 models is in what channels does SuperBox offer.
S7 Max vs. S7 Pro: the only real difference
The S7 Pro has 32GB of internal storage. The S7 Max has 64GB. Both run the same chip, same RAM, same apps, same channel access, same WiFi 6 and ethernet specs. SuperBox’s own documentation confirms: “These two models are identical except for their internal storage.”
Does the extra storage matter? It depends on how you use the device.
32GB fills up faster than you’d expect when you factor in the operating system overhead, pre-installed apps, and any apps you add. Blue TV and Blue VOD are pre-installed. If you also install streaming apps (YouTube, Netflix, etc.), sideloaded apps, and take advantage of the App Store’s expanding library — the January 2026 update alone added seven new apps — 32GB starts to feel constrained after a year of heavy use. Cache builds up, updates require temporary space, and the box slows down when storage runs low.
64GB provides that headroom. It’s the difference between occasionally managing storage and never thinking about it.
S7 Max vs. S7 Ultra: where the gap widens
The S7 Ultra ($449) adds 128GB storage, a backlit remote, and a metal casing that improves heat dissipation. Those differences are meaningful for specific use cases:
Backlit remote: If the device is in a dark living room and used by people who aren’t touch-typing on the remote, the backlit buttons on the Ultra are a genuine quality-of-life upgrade. In a well-lit room or for users who quickly learn the button layout, it’s a preference, not a necessity.
128GB storage: Relevant for households that install a large number of apps, download content for offline viewing, or set up multiple user profiles with different app sets. For a single household with a normal app load, 64GB handles it without issue.
Metal casing: Improves thermal management over long streaming sessions. Relevant in always-on setups or hot environments. A minor consideration for most buyers.
Who the S7 Max is for
The balanced pick for most households. The extra 32GB over the Pro is $40 — less than one month of cable TV. For a device you’ll use daily for 2–4 years, 64GB of storage is the right baseline for a household that installs apps regularly and doesn’t want to manage storage.
Best fit: households with one main TV, moderate app usage (Blue TV + Blue VOD + 3–5 additional apps), no need for a backlit remote, and a preference for the middle tier without overpaying for premium features they won’t use.
Consider the S7 Pro instead if: you’re setting up a secondary TV, you’re cost-sensitive, or your app usage is genuinely minimal (Blue TV, Blue VOD, and nothing else).
Consider the S7 Ultra instead if: the backlit remote matters (dark room, non-technical users), you run a large number of apps simultaneously, or you want the flagship tier.
Setup, channels, and where to buy
Setting up the S7 Max is identical to any S7 model — the full setup guide walks through every step from unboxing to watching in about 15 minutes.
The S7 Max is available through authorized dealers. On the cost question — whether the one-time hardware purchase makes sense against what you’re currently paying — is SuperBox worth it runs the 12-month and 24-month math.
The S7 Max product page with current pricing and purchase options is here.