Amazon / Utilities / SUPER AI
REVIEW
Super Ai is exactly what its name says — and that is the problem.
An anonymous chatbot wrapper on the Fire tablet store with a generic name, a generic icon, and no published description. There are dozens like it. None of them are the thing you want.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 3 MIN READ
The Amazon Fire tablet store has become a graveyard of generically-named AI utilities. Open the Utilities category in 2026 and the same three icons repeat in a dozen variations: a stylised letter on a coloured square, a name that is some permutation of “AI”, “Chat”, “GPT”, “Super”, “Smart”, or “Genius”, and a developer credit you have never seen before and will never see again.
Super Ai is one of them. The name is generic enough to be unverifiable in search. The developer credit, Mahmoud Hassan, does not surface a portfolio or a website on the Amazon listing. There is no published description, no release date, no privacy policy linked above the install button. The store currently shows a five-star rating, which on Amazon’s Fire tablet store almost always means “fewer than five people have rated this.”
The problem is not that wrapper apps are inherently bad. The problem is that the part of an AI utility that actually matters — which model, which vendor, what happens to your prompts after you press send — is exactly the part this category of listing refuses to tell you. And on a tablet where the official apps from the actual AI vendors are one sideload or one browser tab away, a nameless free wrapper is rarely the right install.
When a utility named Super Ai ships with no description and a developer you have never heard of, the answer is almost always the vendor app you have already heard of.
FEATURES
The store listing tells you almost nothing. The name is "Super Ai". The developer is Mahmoud Hassan. The category is Utilities. The price is free with no in-app purchases. There is no published long description, no release date, and no review count on Amazon's Fire tablet store as of this writing. Three phone screenshots are the only window into what the app does.
Apps like this are usually a thin client over a third-party model API — a text input, a scrolling chat transcript, and a network call to a remote endpoint that the developer pays for or proxies. The vendor on the other end of that call is not disclosed on the listing. Neither is the model, the context window, the rate limit, the data-retention policy, or what happens to your prompts after you send them.
None of that is illegal. Plenty of indie wrappers ship this way. It does mean that everything you'd normally check before installing a productivity utility — who the developer is, what data leaves the device, who pays the model bill and how — is unknowable from the Amazon listing alone.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The price is honest. Free with no in-app purchases is the right shape for a wrapper app — the developer either eats the API cost as a portfolio piece, runs ads in a later update, or quietly stops paying the bill when the app stops trending. None of those outcomes leave a user out of pocket.
Being on the Amazon Fire store at all is mildly useful. Fire tablets do not run Google Play, so the official chatbot apps from major LLM vendors require sideloading or the browser. A native APK that opens to a chat box and works on a Fire 7 is, at minimum, less friction than typing a URL.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
Everything a buyer would want to know is missing. There is no description explaining which model the app uses, no developer website linked from the listing, no privacy policy surfaced before install, no version history, no indication of whether prompts are logged, sold, or used for training. The five-star rating exists because there are not enough ratings to mean anything — Amazon's Fire tablet store routinely shows perfect scores on apps with a handful of reviews.
The generic name compounds the problem. "Super Ai" returns dozens of unrelated apps across every store, none of which are made by the same developer, and the icon — a stylised letter mark on a coloured square — is interchangeable with at least ten other wrappers on Fire alone. A user who installs this and dislikes it cannot easily warn anyone else off it, because there is no stable identity to warn them about.
CONCLUSION
Super Ai is a category, not a product. The right move on a Fire tablet is to install the official app from whichever AI vendor you actually want to use — most of them now ship Android APKs that sideload onto Fire without much trouble — or open the vendor's web app in Silk. A nameless wrapper from a developer you cannot vet is a worse deal than the slightly more annoying official path, and the price difference is zero.