>>4447668 My main issue is just the fact that it has a display. I've grown so comfortable using my intuos that drawing on a screen feels very unnatural to me. My hand constantly gets in the way of what i'm drawing. I felt compelled to buy one because it seems like it's what all of the pros use and recommend.
Other issues I have aren't anything major. The software and hardware all function as they should. My huion has a laminated screen, but parallax still exists. Not the fault of huion, just the nature of drawing on a display. There will always be a glass layer separating your pen from the touch layer. I find it's hard to make accurate strokes because of this. Also the pen nib is quite bulky, sometimes getting in the way of the cursor which makes it even harder to make accurate strokes. I tried to see if my wacom stylus would work on this tablet (it doesnt) but I discovered the wacom stylus was a lot more "grippy" on the screen. The Huion pen nibs seem to be made of a harder plastic which makes drawing with it feel more like you're drawing on a glossy surface despite the Huion tablet having an etched glass surface. The pressure curve doesn't seem to be as good as wacoms either. I can't make as light of strokes on this as I could my Intuos tablet. I can adjust the pressure curve to achieve light strokes but then the higher end of the pressure curve seems to get overly sensitive.
But all those gripes I have with it aren't anything major. Infact as an experiment I tried drawing on it as if it were a screenless tablet. I made it so it tracked the pen cursor on my PC's monitor and I thought it drew pretty well. I actually really enjoyed drawing on it this way.