Stuff Verdict
The 16X Aurora looks the part and has a gamer-grade display, but while it’s a more attainable take on the usual Alienware formula, it still carries a hefty premium compared to other RTX 5060 laptops
Pros
- Powerful desktop performance and decent mid-range gaming potential
- Bright, high refresh rate display
- Minimalist looks, strong build quality and good connectivity
Cons
- Expensive for an RTX 5060 machine
- Keyboard doesn’t have per-key lighting
- No OLED display option… currently
Introduction
There are some brands you just don’t associate with the mainstream. Ferrari doesn’t make a family hatchback; no Rolex watch starts below four figures; and Alienware doesn’t really do mid-range gaming laptops. Except now it does. The 16X Aurora dilutes down the firm’s usual outlandish design in favour of something more Dell-inspired and the components list is a little less hardcore than usual, helping push prices into much more affordable territory.
At the time of writing the version tested here will set you back $2070/£1899 – still not the most affordable way to pick up a laptop with RTX 5060 graphics, but a lot less than the flagship Alienware 16 Area-51 I tested only recently. Regular deals and discounts often bring that price down even further too.
The tech world moves quickly, however. Alienware has already said it’ll soon be bringing OLED displays into the mix for the first time, while this 2025-era machine is restricted to LCD. And with Intel’s new Core Ultra X9 Series 3 processors and their much-improved integrated graphics set to arrive imminently, do mid-tier dedicated graphics even make sense anymore?
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Design & build: stealth mode





Compared to the distinctive rolled edges of the latest Area-51, the 16X Aurora looks a lot more traditional. Dare I say boring? The iconic Alien head logo on the lid doesn’t even light up, and there’s no exterior RGB on show anywhere else. Dell has at least permitted Alienware to give the laptop an Interstellar Indigo colour scheme, which to my eyes mostly appears dark blue unless the light hits it just right. Still, if you want a gaming notebook that can go undercover, it absolutely fits the bill.
The all-aluminium chassis does the modern gaming laptop thing of moving the screen hinge forwards, making space for more cooling kit at the rear. It opens a full 180-degrees, which is very handy for finding a good viewing angle when light reflections are being troublesome. Everything feels exceptionally well put together, with zero creaks or case flex, though I found it a bit of a fingerprint magnet.
Alienware has also shifted most (but not all) connectivity to the back, which bodes well for taming cable clutter when used as a desktop replacement machine. The Gigabit Ethernet port feels out of place on the left side of the laptop, next to a USB type-A and 3.5mm headset port; I guess the motherboard layout stopped Alienware from moving it to the back alongside the other USB type-A, twin type-Cs (one of which supports Thunderbolt 4), HDMI 2.1 output and proprietary power port.
A desk really is this laptop’s natural habitat, as it can’t match the thin dimensions and light weight of many 16in rivals. The way the lower half of the system curved at the edges helps disguise some girth, as does the fact only part of the underside protrudes out to make way for the cooling hardware. It’s not so heavy that I’d never consider slinging it into a backpack, but it wouldn’t be my first choice for regular on-the-go working.
Keyboard & touchpad: why so serious?






Before you ask, no you can’t option the 16X Aurora with mechanical key switches like you can the more expensive Area-51; every permutation comes with the same membrane-style setup you’d find on a productivity-minded laptop. It’s also packing a narrow numerical keypad, which has a strong whiff of “Dell parts bin” about it.
There’s been no effort to make the WASD keys stand out, or make space for full-size arrow keys. The RGB backlighting, while even and bright enough, is just a single zone, so you can’t customise the colour of individual keys. The QWERTY and punctuation keys are all full size, at least, with he island-style layout not feeling at all cramped.
Tactile feedback may be all but absent, but there’s a decent amount of key travel and a bouncy enough action that my words per minute didn’t take much of a hit. While the power button does blend in with the rest of the ‘board and is a little too close to the audio shortcuts for my liking, it needs that little bit more force to actuate so I never accidentally powered down the laptop when trying to adjust the volume.
The touchpad is on the small side, with a rather squidgy mechanical click. It proved accurate enough in testing and recognised multi-touch inputs well enough. I still defaulted to a gaming mouse whenever I was at a desk.
Screen & sound: speed demon






Going purely by the spec sheets, nothing can separate the 16X Aurora’s IPS LCD display from the more expensive Area-51’s. Both have 16in panels with 2560×1600 resolutions, nippy 240Hz refresh rates (and Nvidia G-Sync adaptive refresh) and 500 nits peak brightness. That works in this laptop’s favour, as you’re essentially getting the same visual clarity as the flagship machine but for less cash.
I couldn’t spot any obvious discrepancies between the two laptops, even when sat side-by-side. Colour coverage is just as good here, and contrast is respectable for an IPS panel (which is to say nowhere near as good as OLED). The 1600p resolution asks quite a lot from a mid-tier GPU, but does look nicely crisp.
The matte screen coating helps diffuse light reflections rather well, and the 500 nits peak brightness claim proved to be on the money in my testing. It was fine for daytime working, but fans of dark survival horror games should draw the blinds or wait until the evening for the most immersive experience. Missing out on HDR support is a bit of a downer, as it’s increasingly common on gaming laptops around the $1500 mark.
An OLED upgrade wasn’t an option in 2025 either, but Alienware will add one for the updated 2026 model. At the time of writing there was no clue what speccing one would do to the overall cost of a 16X Aurora. As I said in my Area-51 review, don’t bother waiting if you’ll mostly be gaming on an external monitor.
Sound is a bit underwhelming, the two 2W drivers getting loud enough but rarely creating much low-end shove. You’ll reach for a headset for anything more than YouTube clips.
Performance: the dedicated graphics baseline






The X in its name indicates the 16X Aurora is the mid-range model; Alienware also sells the entry-grade 16 Aurora, which has the same chassis but drops down to a 120Hz display and uses less powerful components. I can’t see why you’d opt to equip one with a two-generation-old Nvidia RTX 3050 graphics chip in 2026, though.
My 16X Aurora test system arrived with an Intel Core Ultra 7 255HX processor, RTX 5060 GPU with 8GB of dedicated video memory, 32GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD. If you have deeper pockets you can option a Core Ultra 9 CPU, RTX 5070 graphics, 64GB of RAM and 4TB of storage.
Intel’s 2nd-gen Core Ultra delivers the sort of performance in Windows that you’d expect of a desktop replacement, outscoring slimmer rivals that use a more efficiency-minded ‘Lunar Lake’ Core Ultra 9 in both single- and multi-core tests. Depending on the test it also outmuscled the Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 used in the latest Razer Blade 16, showing the benefits a larger cooling system can bring. Few productivity or creative tasks will be able to bring this thing to its knees.
| Alienware 16X Aurora productivity benchmark scores | |
| Geekbench 6 single-core | 2952 |
| Geekbench 6 multi-core | 18800 |
| Geekbench AI | 10364 |
| Speedometer 3.1 | 21.5 |
While I had modest gaming performance expectations, the amount of power Alienware is able to give to the RTX 5060 – and how well the cooling system can keep temperatures down – helped it get impressively close to the tier above in many of my tests. 3DMark Steel Nomad scores weren’t that far behind an Acer Predator Triton 14 AI with an RTX 5070, and many games were playable at the Alienware’s 2560×1600 resolution at high details as long as I avoided ray tracing.
Shadow of the Tomb Raider looked wonderfully smooth at 92fps, and I’d call the 56fps I got with ray traced lighting enabled largely playable too, thanks to G-Sync eliminating any screen tearing. Gears Tactics was similarly silky. Cyberpunk 2077 proved to be the cutoff point, with Ultra settings resulting in a borderline 48.6fps at native resolution. The RT Overdrive preset refused to run at all, simply asking too much from the hardware. Laptops with RTX 5070Ti GPUs or higher are much more comfortable here.
Nvidia’s latest DLSS upscaling and frame generation tech can make all the difference. Both Shadow of the Tomb Raider and Cyberpunk saw huge gains, though even then ray traced lighting proved too big an ask. How long upscaling can sustain this GPU as games get more demanding in the future is an unknown; personally I’d save up for a GPU from the tier above, with 16GB of VRAM, to be truly future-proof.
| Alienware 16X Aurora gaming benchmark scores | Native rendering (2560×1600) | DLSS upscaling |
| 3DMark Steel Nomad | 2521 / 25.21fps | N/A |
| Gears Tactics | 83.3fps | N/A |
| Cyberpunk 2077 (RT Overdrive) | Would not run | 32.1fps (balanced/4x frame gen) |
| Cyberpunk 2077 (Ultra, RT off) | 48.6fps | 172.1fps (balanced/4x frame gen) |
| Shadow of the Tomb Raider (RT on) | 56fps | 95fps |
| Shadow of the Tomb Raider (RT off) | 92fps | 138fps |
One area I didn’t expect the 16X Aurora to do as well as it did was battery life. It might have a sizeable 92Whr cell, but the processor/GPU combo and big screen are quite power hungry. Still, in a video rundown test at 50% brightness, the Alienware lasted over five and a half hours. That translates to four in regular desktop working, which is a decent showing for a 16in desktop replacement. A Razer Blade 16 remains by pick for longevity away from the mains, though.
Alienware 16X Aurora verdict


Having praised Alienware for going back to its extreme design roots even just a little for the latest Area-51, the Aurora feels much more like a Dell effort, with just a sprinkling of otherworldly styling. The hardware cutbacks made to keep the price in check haven’t compromised performance – and you’re essentially getting the same screen – but they haven’t fully cancelled out the premium you pay for that Alien head logo either.
The best mid-range gaming laptops offer maximum bang for relatively little buck; shop around and you’ll find RTX 5070Ti-powered rivals for similar money to the 16X Aurora’s regular retail price. That said, Dell’s frequent and generous discounts can often swing things back in the Alienware’s favour.
Stuff Says…
The 16X Aurora looks the part and has a gamer-grade display, but while it’s a more attainable take on the usual Alienware formula, it still carries a hefty premium compared to other RTX 5060 gaming laptops
Pros
Powerful desktop performance and decent mid-range gaming potential
Bright, high refresh rate display
Minimalist looks, strong build quality and good connectivity
Cons
Expensive for an RTX 5060 machine
Keyboard doesn’t have per-key lighting
No OLED display option… currently
Alienware 16X Aurora technical specifications
| Screen | 16in, 2560×1600 IPS LCD w/ 240Hz |
| Processor | Intel Core Ultra 7 255HX / Core Ultra 9 275HX |
| Memory | 16/32/64GB RAM |
| Graphics | Nvidia RTX 5060 / RTX 5070 |
| Storage | 1TB/2TB/4TB PCIe SSD |
| Operating system | Windows 11 |
| Connectivity | 1x Thunderbolt 4 Type-C, 1x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C, 2x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A HDMI 2.1, 3.5mm combo port, Ethernet |
| Battery | 90Whr |
| Dimensions | 357x265x19.2-23.4mm, 2.57kg |
