Finding the best laptop for your needs can be a difficult task, particularly as there can be so much to consider.
You’ve got everything from design to internal performance and how good a display is, plus how long it’ll last away from the mains.Our experts have tested hundreds of laptops to sort the wheat from the chaff, and their top picks have been rounded up and ranked in the list.
We’ve made sure to include a variety of options, too, from budget-friendly Chromebooks to the all-powerful MacBook Pro and everything in between.
If you’re looking for something more specific, then it’s worth having a look at our other guides such as Best Student Laptop, Best Budget Laptop, Best Chromebook and Best Gaming Laptop.
Alternatively, if you’re loyal to a specific brand, then we also have dedicated guides such as Best MacBook, Best Asus Laptop and Best Acer Laptop.
Best Laptop at a glance
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Best laptop:
Asus ProArt P16 (2025) – check price -
Best all-rounder:
Asus Zenbook S 16 (2024) – check price -
Best MacBook:
Apple MacBook Pro M4 – check price -
Best 2-in-1:
Microsoft Surface Pro 11 Copilot Plus – check price -
Best laptop under £900:
Acer Aspire 14 AI – check price -
Best Chromebook:
Samsung Galaxy Chromebook Plus – check price -
Best laptop for repairability:
Framework Laptop 13 (2025) – check price -
Best laptop for battery life:
Dell Pro 14 Premium – check price -
Best dual screen laptop:
Asus Zenbook Duo (2025) – check price -
Best high-end gaming laptop:
Medion Erazer Beast 16 X1 Ultimate (RTX 5090) – check price -
Best for gamers with no budget:
Acer Predator Helios Neo 16S AI – check price -
Best mid-range OLED laptop:
HP Omnibook 5 – check price -
Best for pro gamers:
Alienware 18 Area-51 – check price -
Best ultrabook:
LG Gram Pro 16 – check price -
Best compact ultrabook:
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 13 Aura Edition – check price -
Best value ultrabook:
Acer Swift 16 AI – check price -
Best gaming ultrabook:
Razer Blade 14 (2025) – check price
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How we test
Learn more about how we test laptops
Every laptop we review goes through a series of uniform checks designed to gauge key things including build quality, performance, screen quality and battery life.
These include formal synthetic benchmarks and scripted tests, plus a series of real world checks, such as how well it runs the most frequently used apps.
We also make sure to use every laptop we review as our primary device for at least a week to ensure our review is as accurate as possible.
Asus ProArt P16 (2025)
Pros
- Brilliant port selection
- Potent performance
- Gorgeous OLED screen
Cons
- Horrendously expensive
- Rivals can go for longer
Asus Zenbook S 16 (2024)
Pros
- Gorgeous, innovative design
- Beefy performance from AMD APU
- Fantastic battery life
Cons
- Integrated graphics aren’t as powerful as some of the competition
Apple MacBook Pro M4
Pros
- Nano-texture screen is a great option
- Healthy port selection
- Strong everyday performance
- Screen gets very bright
Cons
- You get to M4 Pro prices when you start upgrading the internals
- The Space Black is a bit smudgy
- Nano-texture display is an additional cost
Microsoft Surface Pro 11 Copilot Plus
Pros
- The OLED screen is great
- Strong performance for everyday tasks
- Compact package
Cons
- Keyboard sold separately
- The whole package gets expensive fast
- Not for gaming
Acer Aspire 14 AI
Pros
- Solid performance
- Brilliant endurance
- Good port selection
Cons
- Softer keyboard
Samsung Galaxy Chromebook Plus
Pros
- Lightweight, sleek chassis
- Decent power for a Chromebook
- Excellent endurance
Cons
- Screen lacks some detail
- Speakers are a little thin
Framework Laptop 13 (2025)
Pros
- Easy to assemble and customise
- Decent power with Ryzen AI 7 350 processor
- Solid look and feel
Cons
- Quite expensive for its specs
- Battery life not as strong as key rivals
Dell Pro 14 Premium
Pros
- Immensely light and portable
- Decent power
- Sublime battery life
Cons
- Rather expensive
- Port selection is richer on cheaper rivals
Asus Zenbook Duo (2025)
Pros
- Ingenious dual-screen design
- Sublime high-res OLED displays
- Strong performance against its predecessor
- Decent endurance with fast charging
Cons
- Keyboard attachment feels a tad flimsy
- Battery life not as strong as the competition
- Performance seems a tad constrained
Medion Erazer Beast 16 X1 Ultimate (RTX 5090)
Pros
- Immense power
- Bright, smooth screen
- Surprisingly solid battery life
Cons
- Very expensive
Acer Predator Helios Neo 16S AI
Pros
- Seriously powerful gaming performance
- Sublime OLED screen
- Modern looks
Cons
- Battery life not as strong as rivals
- Heavy chassis
HP Omnibook 5
Pros
- Lightweight and portable
- Decent OLED screen
- Sublime battery life
Cons
- Meagre port selection
- Performance is a little behind rivals
Alienware 18 Area-51
Pros
- Serious gaming power
- Wonderfully tactile keyboard
- Classic space-age Alienware looks
Cons
- Horrendously expensive
- Poor battery life
LG Gram Pro 16
Pros
- Immensely lightweight and portable
- Sublime battery life
- Solid port selection
Cons
- Key rivals can offer more power
- Rather expensive
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 13 Aura Edition
Pros
- Super lightweight and portable frame
- Solid power
- Sublime OLED screen
Cons
- Expensive
- Battery life not as strong as the competition
Acer Swift 16 AI
Pros
- Fantastic OLED screen
- Solid battery life
- Excellent port selection
Cons
- Modest performance for the price
- Thinner speakers
Razer Blade 14 (2025)
Pros
- Rich OLED screen
- Great performance
- Slim and slick design
- Quality touchpad
Cons
- Speakers are solid, but not great
- It’s pricey
- You pay for the slim frame in heat and noise
Asus ProArt P16 (2025)
Best laptop
Pros
-
Brilliant port selection -
Potent performance -
Gorgeous OLED screen
Cons
-
Horrendously expensive -
Rivals can go for longer
The best laptop we’ve tested is the Asus ProArt P16 (2025), which blends a gorgeous OLED screen with heaps of power and decent endurance among other things to cement its place at the top.
It’s a large-screen behemoth that packs in a 16-inch 3K (or 2880×1800) resolution 120Hz OLED screen that impresses with its blend of detail and responsiveness, as well as the deep blacks, vibrant contrast and impeccable colour accuracy we’d expect from an OLED. This also helps its suitability for the creative tasks Asus’ ProArt line products are usually designed for.
The ProArt P16 (2025) also isn’t lacking in power, coming with a potent combo of the Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 and RTX 5070 that aided in it trading blows with the M4 MacBook Pro in our testing. The beefy, modern Nvidia GPU also makes it suitable for some gaming loads, too.
The little things also matter to Asus, with this laptop coming with one of the most tactile laptop keyboards we’ve tested and a brilliant port selection with a range of USB-C, HDMI and USB-A ports for heaps of connectivity. The 10 and half hours of battery life is fine for a laptop with this spec, although you will get better longevity further down the list with other options.
Nonetheless, the Asus ProArt P16 (2025) is a gorgeous, powerful laptop that rightfully has pride of place at the top of our list.
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Asus Zenbook S 16 (2024)
Best all-rounder
Pros
-
Gorgeous, innovative design -
Beefy performance from AMD APU -
Fantastic battery life
Cons
-
Integrated graphics aren’t as powerful as some of the competition
Asus’ Zenbook S range has been charting an impressive course for ultrabooks for some time now, but it’s in the Zenbook S 16 that it feels as though Asus has truly hit its stride.
The highlight feature of this 2024 iteration is the use of Asus’ all-new material known as ‘Ceraluminum’. This is a combination of ceramic and aluminium, which now comprises the upper chassis and makes for a quite lightweight yet durable presence. Plus, best of all, it’s not a fingerprint magnet.
The trackpad has seen a 40% increase over the last generation, making gestures a bit easier to enact. The 65% keyboard is also incredibly tactile with pleasing travel, making this a delight to work on.
What cements the S 16 as an outstanding ultrabook is the powerful Ryzen 9 AI HX 370 processor which, in our testing, was able to outdo the Intel Core Ultra 7 155H-toting Dell XPS 14 (2024), and even show off comparable results with the MacBook Air M3. Pair that with a long battery life of just over 13 hours from our testing and you’re looking at the ideal workstation for those on the go.
Apple MacBook Pro M4
Best MacBook
Pros
-
Nano-texture screen is a great option -
Healthy port selection -
Strong everyday performance -
Screen gets very bright
Cons
-
You get to M4 Pro prices when you start upgrading the internals -
The Space Black is a bit smudgy -
Nano-texture display is an additional cost
In previous versions of this list, we’ve recommended the MacBook Air as the best MacBook out there for most people, although that title now goes to the MacBook Pro M4.
It is in a slightly odd position in terms of power, coming with the same processor as in the MacBook Air M4, Mac Mini M4 and even the iPad Pro M4, where Apple’s Pro laptops have usually shipped with the equivalent Pro or Max models. Coming with this processor as a base configuration makes it cheaper though, which is why it sits in this spot.
The M4 chip is more than sufficiently powerful for everything from more basic web browsing tasks and can be fully loaded up for more creative workloads without breaking too much of a sweat with its 10-core GPU, 10-core CPU and 16-core neural engine. It also blitzed the Geekbench 6 and Cinebench R23 tests with high-riding scores that few laptops have surpassed.
The Pro also benefits from a wider port selection than the Air, with three Thunderbolt 4 USB-C ports, a MagSafe dock for charging, HDMI and an SD card slot. It makes it a lot more versatile than the Air for the kinds of workflows that most people are likely to encounter without the need to reach for a dongle.
You can also pay an extra £150/$150 for a Nano Texture display, which provides hefty gains if you’re working outside or in environments with particularly bright surroundings by reducing glare a significant amount. Being a Pro model also means you get the benefit of Apple’s ProMotion tech with up to 120Hz refresh rate for a crisp and responsive experience.
The M4 MacBook Pro is easily the best MacBook out there for most folks, hitting all the right notes for potent internals, a sublime screen and a functional port selection above all of its other excellent traits.
Microsoft Surface Pro 11 Copilot Plus
Best 2-in-1
Pros
-
The OLED screen is great -
Strong performance for everyday tasks -
Compact package
Cons
-
Keyboard sold separately -
The whole package gets expensive fast -
Not for gaming
At this point in time, the 2-in-1 tablet/laptop concept is almost synonymous with Microsoft’s Surface Pro line, and while it has been home to some great devices, more recent picks have felt a tad iterative. Not so with the Microsoft Surface Pro 11.
Making the jump to ARM architecture (correctly this time) via the Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite or the mid-range X Plus chipset (we tested the version sporting the former), the Surface Pro 11 now runs buttery smooth in everyday tasks. Admittedly, you will find faster performance on the Surface Laptop 7, but it’s now at the level where general slowdown is a thing of the past, and you’re free to crack on with your work unencumbered (so long as it’s Arm compatible of course).
While it’s still outrageous that consumers are expected to buy a keyboard separately from the Surface Pro 11, the new Surface Flex Keyboard does open up the versatility of the device via a wireless Bluetooth connection. This means that you can have the keyboard on your lap whilst the Pro 11 is propped up on a table, and type away as normal.
If your budget can stretch to accommodate it, we also recommend picking up the OLED version of this device. Not only does it make your most used apps pop on-screen, but it also lets the Surface Pro 11 work great for entertainment when in tablet mode, although you’re best pairing it with a set of headphones as the built-in speakers aren’t the best out there.
Acer Aspire 14 AI
Best laptop under £900
Pros
-
Solid performance -
Brilliant endurance -
Good port selection
Cons
-
Softer keyboard
The Acer Aspire 14 AI is also the ‘best laptop for most people’ as it prioritises function over form, and for a reasonable price, too.
The chassis may be a little dated with larger bezels around the screen and less classy than a lot of the slender ultrabooks we’ve seen, but the Aspire 14 AI makes up for it with a much stronger port selection, as well as a functional 1920×1200 OLED screen with good colours, solid detail and exemplary black levels and contrast.
The Intel Core Ultra 7 256V chip inside provides ample performance for basic productivity tasks and can push on to more intensive loads, while the uprated Arc 140V integrated graphics perform remarkably well for a laptop at this price, making it well-suited if you want to dabble in creative tasks such as photo or video editing.
With just over 18 and a half hours on a charge, the Aspire 14 AI is also a seriously strong choice for battery life, although it isn’t the longest we’ve tested. The keyboard and trackpad are also a bit of a mixed bag, although for the price, it’s only a minor complaint.
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Samsung Galaxy Chromebook Plus
Best Chromebook
Pros
-
Lightweight, sleek chassis -
Decent power for a Chromebook -
Excellent endurance
Cons
-
Screen lacks some detail -
Speakers are a little thin
The Samsung Galaxy Chromebook Plus jumps up to claim the crown of the best Chromebook out there for its gorgeous ultrabook-style design, more than ample power for basic tasks and typically great battery life.
It proves that Chromebooks aren’t just cheap, incapable laptops in their price segment these days, coming with a 10-core Intel Core 5 120U processor that blitzed the Geekbench 6 test and was in line with more expensive Windows laptops such as the Asus Zenbook A14. There is also a decent set of 256GB storage, and while the 8GB of RAM might seem stingy in 2025, it’s fine for the workloads you’re likely to undertake.
ChromeOS remains a slick and lightweight OS for using Google’s G Suite of apps for word processing and web browsing. Being a Chromebook Plus laptop also means this Samsung option has some nifty AI features, bringing over the Magic Eraser tech from Google’s Pixel phones as well as live translated captions and auto-framing and background blur tech for the webcam when in Google Meet scenarios.
This Chromebook, in spite of weighing just 1.17kg, feels especially lightweight and durable for its price, while also coming with a larger 15.6-inch AMOLED screen. It also sports a competent set of ports, snappy keyboard and slick trackpad for making work a breeze.
Framework Laptop 13 (2025)
Best laptop for repairability
Pros
-
Easy to assemble and customise -
Decent power with Ryzen AI 7 350 processor -
Solid look and feel
Cons
-
Quite expensive for its specs -
Battery life not as strong as key rivals
If you’re after a laptop that’s especially well-suited to being configured and repaired, then the Framework Laptop 13 (2025) is ideal for what you’re after.
It’s a laptop you can either purchase fully configured, or as a DIY kit that needs you to install the RAM, storage, and attach the keyboard tray and screen bezel, as well as its modular ports, before setting it up as you would a Windows desktop. The whole process takes around 20 minutes in our testing, and is rather fun. It also has the benefit of making this laptop virtually infinitely repairable, especially as it only needs a T5 screwdriver to take apart.
This isn’t just a gimmick either, as the Framework Laptop 13 (2025) is a genuinely strong laptop. It comes with an eight-core AMD Ryzen 7 AI 350 processor that we found to offer surprisingly excellent performance against both premium ultrabooks and modern MacBook Airs, too. RAM and storage are your choice from Framework’s configurator, or you can provide your own.
You get a choice of operating systems, with either Windows 11, Arch or Fedora Linux distros. Going with Windows with the new Ryzen AI 300 model means you have to use Rufus to create a bootable Windows installer and set it up that way – it took longer for Windows to work than to build the laptop! It means you have an operating system that you can configure though, which is nice.
As with the MacBook Pro M4, you can choose to pay an extra £130/$130 to upgrade this laptop’s base 2256×1504 resolution matte IPS screen with a 60Hz refresh rate up to a 2880×1920 120Hz IPS option for more detail and smoother on-screen action. We’d argue it’s a price worth paying for a screen with punchy brightness, excellent colour accuracy and decent black levels and contrast.
The 10 and a half hours measured in our battery life test might not set the world alight, but it means the Framework Laptop 13 (2025) will go all day before you need to plug it into the mains.
The only other small issue is its price at nearly £2000/$2000 for the spec we were sent, which can buy you ultrabooks with innovative materials, OLED screens and longer endurance. However, none of them have the infinite repairability and customisation that this Framework option does.
Dell Pro 14 Premium
Best laptop for battery life
Pros
-
Immensely light and portable -
Decent power -
Sublime battery life
Cons
-
Rather expensive -
Port selection is richer on cheaper rivals
If it’s battery life that matters most to you in a laptop, the option that wins in our testing is the business-centric Dell Pro 14 Premium.
It managed to last for nearly 23 hours in our battery test, essentially working out to three working days away from the mains, which is some serious endurance. It’s the longest battery life we’ve tested in a laptop, and is ideal if you’re someone who is away from a plug for a lot of the day.
The Pro 14 Premium isn’t short of overall power, coming with an Intel Core Ultra 7 268V processor with eight cores and threads with strong single-core performance, even if its multi-core performance is behind rivals that cost a bit less. There is also 32GB of RAM and a fast 1TB SSD inside.
You may not get an OLED screen, but the 1920×1200 resolution IPS option here is respectable for the kind of workloads this laptop is likely to be used for. It’s bright and crisp with good colours and excellent contrast and black levels for the panel type.
At just 1.14kg, the Pro 14 Premium is also seriously lightweight and portable without skimping too much on ports, while it also sports one of Dell’s new ‘Zero Lattice’ keyboards that had previously been a part of their XPS line for an immensely positive and tactile typing feel.
The big drawback with this Dell candidate is its price tag at £2383.98/$2679.27, which makes it pricier than the competing Lenovo ThinkPad candidate and than a lot of other premium ultrabook options. However, if it’s battery life that’s most important, you won’t get better than the Pro 14 Premium.
Asus Zenbook Duo (2025)
Best dual screen laptop
Pros
-
Ingenious dual-screen design -
Sublime high-res OLED displays -
Strong performance against its predecessor -
Decent endurance with fast charging
Cons
-
Keyboard attachment feels a tad flimsy -
Battery life not as strong as the competition -
Performance seems a tad constrained
The Asus Zenbook Duo (2025) is more of an iterative upgrade over its predecessor, but it nonetheless makes for the best dual screen laptop we’ve tested.
A dual screen laptop in any guise has the advantage of giving you virtually double the real estate of a conventional laptop, and the Zenbook Duo (2025) features a pair of gorgeous 14-inch 3K resolution 120Hz OLED touchscreens for ultimate versatility. They’re sharp, detailed and offer some sublime image quality, along with surprisingly responsive touch inputs using the included stylus.
This is also an immensely versatile laptop, working with both its screens when on its kickstand and the included keyboard attachment, and can also be used as a more conventional laptop with the keyboard attachment over the bottom screen. Ports are also pretty good if connectivity is a top priority, while the magnesium aluminium alloy chassis ensure a solid build. At 1.35kg, the Zenbook Duo (2025) is surprisingly light for a laptop that carries two screens.
The 2025 model is also bestowed with the Intel Core Ultra 9 285H processor, the most powerful in Intel’s Arrow Lake-H lineup with 16 cores and 16 threads. It blitzes our benchmarks, providing a healthy uplift over the previous generation Zenbook Duo, and has a much stronger set of integrated graphics for making creative work even more of a breeze and even allowing you to dabble in some gaming, too. Some thermal constraints are being hit with the form factor, meaning it can get on the warmer side.
It also managed to exceed Asus’ quoted battery life figure, lasting for 12 or so hours in our battery test, and an endurance result that’s a third higher than last year’s model.
Medion Erazer Beast 16 X1 Ultimate (RTX 5090)
Best high-end gaming laptop
Pros
-
Immense power -
Bright, smooth screen -
Surprisingly solid battery life
Cons
-
Very expensive
If it’s the absolute pinnacle of gaming performance you’re after in a gaming laptop, then the Medion Erazer Beast 16 X1 Ultimate (RTX 5090) is the finest option we’ve tested.
Packing a beefy core of Intel’s 24-core Core Ultra 9 275HX processor and Nvidia’s most powerful laptop GPU in the RTX 5090, it predictably leads to some serious gaming power in our testing in Cyberpunk 2077 and Returnal.
Adding in powerful ray-tracing also didn’t cause this laptop too much trouble, leading games to look sublime at 1440p. You also get the powers of Nvidia’s new Multi-Frame Gen tech with the new 50-series GPU inside. It adds in up to three ‘fake frames’ with AI for every traditionally generated one to yield higher FPS figures without much of a penalty in latency – very handy for a perceivably smoother experience and to take advantage of the laptop’s 16-inch QHD+ 300Hz Mini LED screen.
The Erazer Beast 16 X1 Ultimate (RTX 5090)’s screen is also a highlight, with ridiculously high peak brightness along with OLED-class black levels and contrast for genuinely fantastic output. Colour accuracy is also rather good, while the blend of a high resolution and refresh rate keeps images sharp and beautifully smooth.
The design of this Medion option is a bit more grown up with little in the way of the brash styling that has characterised gaming laptops in recent times. It feels solid with a metal frame, although at nearly 3kg in weight and 30mm thick is quite unwieldy for taking on the go. The port selection here is far-reaching, while the keyboard is snappy and the trackpad is pleasantly responsive.
For such a powerful laptop, the Erazer Beast 16 X1 Ultimate (RTX 5090) has surprisingly good endurance, lasting for 7 hours or so in our testing, meaning gaming on battery power for a few hours is theoretically possible. This is an expensive choice, but if you want serious gaming power, this Medion laptop is the best out there in our view.
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Acer Predator Helios Neo 16S AI
Best for gamers with no budget
Pros
-
Seriously powerful gaming performance -
Sublime OLED screen -
Modern looks
Cons
-
Battery life not as strong as rivals -
Heavy chassis
If you’re in the enviable position of having next to no concerns about budgeting when it comes to buying your next gaming laptop then the Acer Predator Helios Neo 16S AI is a near-perfect option that’s all too easy to recommend. With a price tag of £1999/$1899.99, it’ll be too expensive for most people, but for those who can afford it, you’ll be getting tons of great features in return for your cash.
Simply put, this is a beast of a machine that’ll have almost no issues with playing the latest games with tons of visual fidelity. This is achieved by having a winning combination between the super fast Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX CPU which is designed to perform well under pressure, and the top of the line RTX 5070 Ti GPU that’s meant to extract as much detail as possible in whatever it is you want to play.
When it came to testing out the combined performance of the CPU and GPU under the hood, we were absolutely floored with the results. When running both games at 1080p, we are able to see blazingly fast speeds of 97.12fps and 110fps from session in Cyberpunk 2077 and Returnal respectively. Given just how particle and visual detail these games have to offer, that’s no easy feat, and you’ll still get fast speeds if you want to bump up the resolution to 1440p.
Things got even better when we brought the DLSS Transformer into the mix, which was able to upscale these games and improve the experience by quite a degree. As an example, diving back into Cyberpunk but activating ray-tracing resulted in 25.63fps at the laptop’s native resolution, but this then soared to 50.87fps once DLSS was activated.
All of this combines to offer a gaming experience that few other laptops can hope to achieve, and it’s only made better by the sizeable amount of ports you have on the thing. In addition to HDMI 2.1 for easy hook-up to an external monitor, there are two Thunderbolt 4 slots, two USB 3.2 ports, a 3.5mm headphone jack and an Ethernet port.
HP Omnibook 5
Best mid-range OLED laptop
Pros
-
Lightweight and portable -
Decent OLED screen -
Sublime battery life
Cons
-
Meagre port selection -
Performance is a little behind rivals
Buying a mid-range laptop, in the past, has been a tricky endeavour. Compared to the rush of the smartphone world, which has pushed to bring more flagship features down to the mid-range level, similar treatment for laptops has been a slower burn, but thankfully the wait is largely over as the HP Omnibook 5 is one of those great laptops that doesn’t cost too much at the checkout but offers a ton of high-end features in return.
At £849.99, the Omnibook 5 undercuts the latest MacBook Air by quite a bit, so it already has a major win in its corner for anyone who doesn’t want to spend too much on their next laptop, but the device itself still includes one of the best laptop chipsets available right now: the Snapdragon X. This Arm-based CPU is effectively the Windows alternative to Apple’s well refined M-series of chipsets, and although it’s taken a while for Windows to catch up, there’s plenty to write home about here.
When it comes to daily work tasks, whether that be sorting out a quick bit of video editing, dabbling in Photoshop or even just going through the finances in Google Sheets, it all runs blazingly fast, and it’ll have your current laptop feeling positively ancient by comparison. The CPU is also designed with AI in mind, allowing it to run Copilot+ on device, which can be helpful in a pinch if you want to brainstorm some ideas or put together a quick schedule.
The 14-inch OLED display is wonderfully bright, and whilst that’s always a boon for day to day tasks, it really comes alive whenever you decide to call it a day and kick back with some entertainment. It doesn’t matter if you’re watching a new hit TV series or an old Hollywood classic, it’ll all come to life with vibrant colours and terrific contrast that really indulges in the deep blacks that only OLED can provide.
What’s sure to be great news for anyone who regularly travels into the office or has to work internationally on occasion, the HP Omnibook 5 only weighs in at 1.29kg, so you’ll barely notice its presence when stowed away in a bag. For when you are burning the midnight oil, you won’t run into any issues with comfort as the built-in trackpad is smooth to the touch whilst the keyboard feels very tactile with each button press, making it well suited for any touch typers out there.
Alienware 18 Area-51
Best for pro gamers
Pros
-
Serious gaming power -
Wonderfully tactile keyboard -
Classic space-age Alienware looks
Cons
-
Horrendously expensive -
Poor battery life
Consider yourself a pro-level gamer who can’t fathom the idea of using equipment that falls short of being the very best? Well, so long as you have the money to meet the laptop’s high-asking price, the Alienware 18 Area 51 has been made with you in mind. This is a true beast in the PC gaming space, and it offers up an experience that most of its competitors could only dream of.
Under the hood is the unstoppable Nvidia RTX 5090 graphics card, which is paired with a similarly powerful Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX processor. This combination leads to unbeatable performance, as we discovered in our tests. Running demanding titles like Cyberpunk 2077 and Returnal at 1080p resolution results in a frame rate of 157.82fps and 166fps respectively. This is the type of graphical leap that truly feels next-gen, and it’ll have you wanting to revisit your favourite titles, let alone dive into new ones.
Performance at 1440p resolution is also excellent, and for a fast-paced game like Rainbow Six Extraction, which demands near imperceptible speed to take down the enemy team, we still clocked a whopping 213fps. For those who prefer having detail rich graphics as opposed to high-speed performance, you can absolutely toggle ray tracing here and see digital worlds like Night City in Cyberpunk really come to life. Between the shadows of steam emanating from food vendors to colourful puddles after a bout of rain, Night City has never looked so good.
As you may have already spotted, the laptop benefits from a huge 18-inch 300Hz display which is big enough to give you an immersive experience from the jump, saving you from having to immediately go out and buy one of the best gaming monitors. Plus, having that larger display can also come in handy for multitasking during the day when you need to get a bit of work done in between your gaming sessions.
Just when you think the Alienware 18 Area 51 couldn’t get any better, the whole thing packs a built-in mechanical keyboard, offering a far more tactile and responsive typing experience, making you feel more in tune with the action happening on screen. There are also tons of ports at the rear of the device (so you can keep wires out of view) including an Ethernet port, an SD card slot and two Thunderbolt 5 ports, just to name a few.
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LG Gram Pro 16
Best ultrabook
Pros
-
Immensely lightweight and portable -
Sublime battery life -
Solid port selection
Cons
-
Key rivals can offer more power -
Rather expensive
Whoever said that ultrabooks were on their way out had clearly not taken the time to inspect the ever-so brilliant LG Gram Pro 16. Taking the LG Gram series to new heights, the Pro 16 still delivers on the core promise of cramming tons of power and top-level performance into a minute frame, but with a few key upgrades.
At its very core, the fact that this is a 16-inch laptop that still manages to weigh in at only 1.2kg and be no more than 12.9mm thick, is somewhat mindboggling. If you’re old enough to remember carrying around laptops the size of car doors, or even trying to use a chunkier gaming laptop as your main work device on the go, the Gram Pro 16 is the solution you’ve been waiting for.
On the performance level, the inclusion of the Intel Core Ultra 7 258V chip means that the Gram Pro 16 has very few competitors. Because it runs on Arm architecture, the processor paves the way for incredible performance in demanding apps, whether it be a spot of animation or even some video editing, so if your job includes such tasks on occasion then you won’t be held up here.
Helping to keep everything running in our review unit was a hefty helping of 32GB RAM and a spacious 1TB SSD to go along with it, the latter being ever-so important when you need to pull up key files in an instant and you don’t want to constantly rely on cloud storage and an internet connection by extension.
Even though the Gram Pro 16 invites you to keep things scaled back, the abundance of ports available does mean that you have the freedom to add accessories like a dedicated keyboard or mouse, giving you the freedom to customise your setup as you see fit. Most impressive above all however is the battery life, as we managed to nab 21 hours and 10 minutes of use which is unbelievable for a laptop of this size.
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 13 Aura Edition
Best compact ultrabook
Pros
-
Super lightweight and portable frame -
Solid power -
Sublime OLED screen
Cons
-
Expensive -
Battery life not as strong as the competition
If you thought that the LG Gram Pro 16 was great in concept but you liked the idea of having an even smaller laptop then you’re in luck as the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 13 Aura Edition has pretty much been made with you in mind. Despite stiff competition from LG, this is still a great pick for having a capable workstation that’s easy to carry around.
Weighing just under a kilogram, the ThinkPad X1 is one of those laptops that’s so lightweight, you might be forgiven for thinking that it hasn’t actually been stowed away in your backpack. Still, that is the brilliance of Lenovo’s engineering, especially as the highly portable frame does not come at the cost of performance in the slightest.
Under the hood is the effortlessly powerful Intel Core Ultra 7 258V which, just like with all of the other laptops we’ve tested with the chip, is able to keep up with fairly intensive workloads. In tests across Cinebench R23 and Geekbench 6, the processor produced absurdly high scores which, in layman’s terms means that there are very few work tasks that you can’t put it through.
On top of the performance, it’s the 14-inch OLED display that makes the experience of working on the ThinkPad X1 feel so much more engaging. Colours pop with vivid contrast (which is also great for kicking back with a bit of entertainment), while the 2.8K resolution allows everything from Google Docs to spreadsheets appear crisp and detailed when onscreen.
Something that often gets overlooked when it comes to ultrabooks is the comfort of the keyboard and the accompanying trackpad, but Lenovo has made sure to put in the effort here, producing a combo that works brilliantly. The keyboard in particular feels very comfortable to use, which is great news for anyone who does tons of typing throughout an average day.
Acer Swift 16 AI
Best value ultrabook
Pros
-
Fantastic OLED screen -
Solid battery life -
Excellent port selection
Cons
-
Modest performance for the price -
Thinner speakers
Given just how expensive some ultrabooks can be, the fact that the Acer Swift 16 AI only carries a price tag of £1199.99/$1199.99 but can sometimes be found for even less, just sweetens the deal to the point where it’s arguably the go-to option of the bunch for any buyers who still want to have a bit of money left over.
What’s even more impressive is that despite being cheaper than the competition, the Acer Swift 16 AI doesn’t really leave anything on the table when it comes to the core features you’d want out of a laptop like this. At 1.53kg, the Swift 16 is by far one of the most portable 16-inch laptops we’ve tested, so right off the bat it’s a great pick for anyone who wants a larger screen experience in a more compact form factor.
The screen itself is enough to make most other laptops jealous, with it boasting a wonderfully vivid OLED panel that’s rich in detail thanks to a 2.8K resolution. While we imagine that you’re mostly looking at a laptop like this for the sake of productivity, it’s nice to know that when you are ready to call it a day, you can also rely on that same device for some of the best streaming quality as well.
Whether you’re watching a bit of Netflix or streaming games over Game Pass, it’ll all look amazing. Running the show is the ultra powerful Intel Core 5 226V processor which absolutely runs toe to toe with the competition on single-core performance. The inclusion of an NPU also allows for Microsoft’s Copilot Plus to run perfectly.
If you’re a student who’s stuck on a question or a professional looking to find some inspiration for a project, Copilot can be a very helpful tool in this regard, working as a personal assistant to help you get to where you need to be when there’s no one in the immediate vicinity to bounce ideas off of.
Razer Blade 14 (2025)
Best gaming ultrabook
Pros
-
Rich OLED screen -
Great performance -
Slim and slick design -
Quality touchpad
Cons
-
Speakers are solid, but not great -
It’s pricey -
You pay for the slim frame in heat and noise
As much as we love ultrabooks, deciding to go for an effortlessly slim laptop with tons of power has typically been a process reserved for the realms of productivity, but the Razer Blade 14 finally brings the gaming crowd into the equation, and in a big way. Going against the bulky designs of most gaming laptops, this is a device that’s easy to fit into a backpack.
Even though you’re getting a sizeable 14-inch display, the Blade 14 still carries a fairly lightweight 1.63kg frame that’s only 16.2mm thick, and because it features Razer’s signature understated look, it doesn’t stand out in the gaudy way that some gaming laptops can. It’s not at all what you’d expect from the market, but it means that you can bring high-power performance with you, without it weighing you down.
The model we tested featured the killer combination of an AMD Ryzen 9 365 AI CPU (complete with 32GB RAM) and an Nvidia RTX 5070 GPU. As you can imagine, these specs allow the Razer Blade 14 to pull off some impressive feats of strength, with practically any triple-A game being playable here.
With the 5070 drawing a consistent 100W during our playtests, it paved the way for 95.9fps when playing Cyberpunk 2077 at 1080p and with Ultra settings enabled. That dropped to 55.45fps when moving over to QHD resolution, but that’s still impressive given just how slim the laptop is. You can expect even better results with games like Rainbow Six Extraction and Returnal.
Circling back to the display, you’re getting a wonderfully bright OLED panel here. This combines with the performance of the GPU to give these digital worlds the pop of colour and contrast that they deserve. This sentiment is especially poignant with Cyberpunk 2077, as it allows the darker side streets of Night City to lure you in as they’re lit by nearby neon signs. It’s a true visual feast.
Test Data
| Asus ProArt P16 (2025) | Asus Zenbook S 16 (2024) | Apple MacBook Pro M4 | Microsoft Surface Pro 11 Copilot Plus | Acer Aspire 14 AI | Samsung Galaxy Chromebook Plus | Framework Laptop 13 (2025) | Dell Pro 14 Premium | Asus Zenbook Duo (2025) | Medion Erazer Beast 16 X1 Ultimate (RTX 5090) | Acer Predator Helios Neo 16S AI | HP Omnibook 5 | Alienware 18 Area-51 | LG Gram Pro 16 | Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 13 Aura Edition | Acer Swift 16 AI | Razer Blade 14 (2025) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCMark 10 | 8292 | 7339 | – | – | 7623 | – | 7291 | 7603 | 7885 | 9142 | 8340 | – | 9487 | 7243 | 7127 | 7662 | – |
| UL Procyon photo editing | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | -4 | – | – | – |
| Cinebench R23 multi core | 22629 | 14554 | 13830 | 7760 | 9618 | – | 11948 | 9609 | 12425 | 21138 | 22356 | 7077 | 34939 | 9583 | 7235 | 7963 | – |
| Cinebench R23 single core | 2943 | 1930 | 2187 | 915 | 1911 | – | 1949 | 1932 | 2128 | 2247 | 2165 | 968 | 2208 | 1927 | 1915 | 1777 | – |
| Geekbench 6 single core | 2058 | 2808 | 3767 | 2255 | 2658 | 1947 | 2887 | 2855 | 2784 | 3080 | 3085 | 2135 | 3101 | 2756 | 2748 | 2522 | 2893 |
| Geekbench 6 multi core | 22606 | 12924 | 14955 | 11859 | 10638 | 7080 | 12935 | 11015 | 15460 | 18634 | 19436 | 10571 | 21121 | 10939 | 11075 | 10069 | 14795 |
| 3DMark Time Spy | 11630 | 3528 | – | – | 4340 | – | 2719 | 3997 | 4331 | 20414 | 9230 | 1063 | 23955 | 4262 | 3002 | 3507 | 12773 |
| CrystalDiskMark Read speed | 5280.88 MB/s | 5059.92 MB/s | 2911.8 MB/s | – | 6386.86 MB/s | – | 7002.83 MB/s | 6555.90 MB/s | 5234.14 MB/s | 9748.52 MB/s | 7140.88 MB/s | 5052.58 MB/s | 13787.73 MB/s | 7133.66 MB/s | 13873.34 MB/s | 4796.17 MB/s | – |
| CrystalDiskMark Write Speed | 4896.13 MB/s | 3685.65 MB/s | 3335.7 MB/s | – | 5581.54 MB/s | – | 6308.00 MB/s | 5836.92 MB/s | 4830.99 MB/s | 7822.62 MB/s | 4479.50 MB/s | 4612.78 MB/s | 12807.95 MB/s | 6487.43 MB/s | 11748.03 MB/s | 3504.39 MB/s | – |
| Brightness (SDR) | 359.1 nits | 338.1 nits | 900 nits | 550 nits | 383.5 nits | – | 500 nits | 429.9 nits | 345.3 nits | 774.9 nits | 437 nits | 286.4 nits | 490.6 nits | 419.5 nits | 400.2 nits | 394.6 nits | 400 nits |
| Brightness (HDR) | 500 nits | – | 1500 nits | 800 nits | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | 613 nits |
| Black level | 0.01 nits | 0.03 nits | – | – | 0.01 nits | – | 0.25 nits | 0.14 nits | 0.01 nits | 0.03 nits | 0.03 nits | 0.01 nits | 0.12 nits | 0.21 nits | 0.01 nits | 0.01 nits | – |
| Contrast ratio | 26360:1 | 12810:1 | – | – | 28000:1 | – | 1390:1 | 1830:1 | 25210:1 | 28010:1 | 15830:1 | 20920:1 | 1010:1 | 1380:1 | 29180:1 | 28810:1 | – |
| White Visual Colour Temperature | 6600 K | 6500 K | – | – | 6600 K | – | 7100 K | 6600 K | 6900 K | 6600 K | 6500 K | 6700 K | 6500 K | 7300 K | 6600 K | 6800 K | – |
| sRGB | 100 % | 100 % | – | 151 % | 100 % | – | 100 % | 100 % | 100 % | 100 % | 99 % | 100 % | 100 % | 100 % | 100 % | 100 % | 100 % |
| Adobe RGB | 94 % | 94 % | – | – | 95 % | – | 77 % | 76 % | 95 % | 87 % | 76 % | 97 % | 88 % | 87 % | 95 % | 94 % | 90.3 % |
| DCI-P3 | 100 % | 100 % | 99 % | 112 % | 99 % | – | 81 % | 76 % | 100 % | 98 % | 76 % | 100 % | 98 % | 98 % | 100 % | 100 % | 99.2 % |
| PCMark Battery (office) | 10.5 hrs | 13 hrs | – | – | 18.5 hrs | – | 10.5 hrs | 23 hrs | 12 hrs | 6.95 hrs | 5 hrs | 22.5 hrs | 2.5 hrs | 21.2 hrs | 11.9 hrs | 14.75 hrs | 7.75 hrs |
| Battery discharge after 60 minutes of online Netflix playback | 6 % | 3 % | 94 % | – | 6 % | 7 % | 11 % | 5 % | 7 % | 15 % | 20 % | 2 % | 33 % | 5 % | 4 % | 7 % | – |
| Battery recharge time | 75 mins | 100 mins | – | 123 mins | 94 mins | 112 mins | 106 mins | 66 mins | 88 mins | 152 mins | 128 mins | 92 mins | 110 mins | 108 mins | 91 mins | 95 mins | – |
| Cyberpunk 2077 (Quad HD) | 48.92 fps | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | 12.13 fps | 99.36 fps | 67.64 fps | – | 120.15 fps | – | – | – | 48.45 fps |
| Cyberpunk 2077 (Full HD) | 82.19 fps | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | 20.10 fps | 142.04 fps | 97.12 fps | – | 157.82 fps | – | – | – | 95.9 fps |
| Cyberpunk 2077 (Full HD + RT) | 34.88 fps | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | 7.88 fps | 62.98 fps | 46.68 fps | – | 76.82 fps | – | – | – | 24 fps |
| Cyberpunk 2077 (Full HD + Supersampling) | 55 fps | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | 24.82 fps | 144.20 fps | 118.53 fps | – | 165.33 fps | – | – | – | 129 fps |
| Returnal (Quad HD) | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | 18 fps | 112 fps | 77 fps | – | 133 fps | – | – | – | – |
| Returnal (Full HD) | 90 fps | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | 27 fps | 148 fps | 110 fps | – | 166 fps | – | – | – | 118 fps |
| Rainbow Six Extraction (Quad HD) | 96 fps | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | 25 fps | 170 fps | 732 fps | – | 213 fps | – | – | – | 109 fps |
| Rainbow Six Extraction (Full HD) | 154 fps | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | 43 fps | 247 fps | 193 fps | – | 318 fps | – | – | – | 163 fps |
Full Specs
| Asus ProArt P16 (2025) Review | Asus Zenbook S 16 (2024) Review | Apple MacBook Pro M4 Review | Microsoft Surface Pro 11 Copilot Plus Review | Acer Aspire 14 AI | Samsung Galaxy Chromebook Plus Review | Framework Laptop 13 (2025) Review | Dell Pro 14 Premium Review | Asus Zenbook Duo (2025) Review | Medion Erazer Beast 16 X1 Ultimate (RTX 5090) Review | Acer Predator Helios Neo 16S AI Review | HP Omnibook 5 Review | Alienware 18 Area-51 Review | LG Gram Pro 16 Review | Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 13 Aura Edition Review | Acer Swift 16 AI Review | Razer Blade 14 (2025) Review | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UK RRP | £2798.99 | £1699.99 | – | – | £899.99 | £749 | £1974 | £2383.98 | £1999.99 | £3499.97 | £1999 | £849.99 | £4348.98 | £1799.98 | £2420 | £1199.99 | – |
| USA RRP | – | $1699.99 | – | – | – | $700 | $1953 | $2679.27 | $1699.99 | – | $1899.99 | – | $4399.99 | $2299.99 | $2549 | $1194.99 | – |
| CPU | AMD Ryzen AI HX 370 | AMD Ryzen 9 AI HX 370 | Apple M4 | Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus or X Elite | Intel Core Ultra 7 256V | Intel Core 5 120U | AMD Ryzen AI 7 350 | Intel Core Ultra 7 268V | Intel Core Ultra 9 285H | Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX | Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX | Snapdragon X | Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX | Intel Core Ultra 7 258V | Intel Core Ultra 7 258V | Intel Core Ultra 5 226V | AMD Ryzen AI 365 |
| Manufacturer | Asus | Asus | Apple | Microsoft | Acer | Samsung | – | Dell | Asus | – | Acer | HP | Alienware | LG | – | Acer | Razer |
| Quiet Mark Accredited | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Screen Size | 16 inches | 16 inches | 14.2 inches | 13 mm | 14 inches | 15.6 inches | 13.5 inches | 14 inches | 14 inches | 16 inches | 16 inches | 14 inches | 18 inches | 16 inches | 14 inches | 16 inches | 14 inches |
| Storage Capacity | 2TB | 1TB | 512GB, 1TB, 2TB | 256GB, 512GB, 1TB | 1TB | 256GB | 2TB | 1TB | 2TB | 2TB | 32GB | 512GB | 2TB | 1TB | 1TB | 512GB | 32GB |
| Front Camera | – | 1080p Asus AISense webcam | 12MP | 10MP | 1080p webcam | 1080p webcam | 1080p webcam | 8MP IR FHD webcam | 1080p IR webcam | 1080p webcam | 1080p webcam | 1080p webcam | 4K webcam | 1080p webcam | 1080p webcam | – | 1080p |
| Battery | 90 Whr | 78 Whr | 72.4 Whr | – | 65 Whr | 68 Whr | 60 Whr | 57 Whr | 75 Whr | 99.9 Whr | 76 Whr | 59 Whr | 96 Whr | 77 Whr | 58 Whr | 70 Whr | 72 Whr |
| Battery Hours | 10 23 | 13 18 | 24 00 | – | 18 35 | 15 25 | 10 31 | 22 53 | 12 6 | 6 55 | 5 1 | 22 23 | 2 38 | 21 10 | 11 51 | 14 45 | – |
| Size (Dimensions) | 354.9 x 246.9 x 14.9 INCHES | 353.6 x 243 x 11 MM | 31.26 x 22.12 x 1.55 CM | 209 x 287 x 9.3 MM | 318.9 x 225.1 x 16.9 MM | 225.8 x 355.8 x 9.8 MM | 296.63 x 228.98 x 15.85 MM | 311.20 x 216.70 x 16.38 MM | 313.43 x 217.93 x 14.6 MM | 357 x 245 x 30 INCHES | 356.78 x 275 x 13.47 MM | 312.1 x 217.5 x 12.6 MM | 410 x 320 x 24.32 INCHES | 357.7 x 251.6 x 12.9 MM | 312.8 x 214.75 x 11.37 MM | 356 x 249.4 x 9.92 MM | 310.7 x 224.3 x 16.2 MM |
| Weight | 1.85 KG | 1.5 KG | 1.55 KG | 895 G | 1.4 G | 1.17 KG | 1.3 KG | 1.14 KG | 1.35 KG | 2.8 KG | 2.7 KG | 1.29 KG | 4.34 KG | 1.2 KG | 0.984 KG | 1.53 KG | 1.63 KG |
| ASIN | – | – | – | B0D1VZZCTD | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Operating System | Windows 11 | Windows 11 | MacOS Sonoma | Windows 11 | Windows 11 | ChromeOS | Windows 11/Fedora/Arch Linux | Windows 11 | Windows 11 | Windows 11 | – | Windows 11 | Windows 11 | Windows 11 | Windows 11 | Windows 11 | Windows 11 |
| Release Date | 2025 | 2024 | 2024 | 2024 | 2025 | 2024 | 2025 | 2025 | 2025 | 2025 | 2025 | 2025 | 2025 | 2025 | 2024 | 2025 | 2025 |
| First Reviewed Date | 13/05/2025 | 26/07/2024 | 06/02/2025 | – | – | 15/03/2025 | 01/06/2025 | 16/04/2025 | 11/02/2025 | – | 31/07/2025 | 27/08/2025 | 06/08/2025 | – | 22/04/2025 | 17/04/2025 | 03/10/2025 |
| Resolution | 2880 x 1800 | 2880 x 1800 | 3024 x 1964 | 2880 x 1920 | 1920 x 1200 | 1920 x 1080 | 2880 x 1920 | 1920 x 1200 | 2880 x 1800 | 2560 x 1600 | 2560 x 1600 | 1920 x 1200 | 2560 x 1600 | 2560 x 1600 | 2880 x 1800 | 2880 x 1800 | 2880 x 1800 |
| HDR | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | – | – | – | Yes | Yes | Yes | – | – | – | – | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Refresh Rate | 120 Hz | 120 Hz | 120 Hz | 120 Hz | 60 Hz | 60 Hz | 120 Hz | 60 Hz | 120 Hz | 300 Hz | 240 Hz | 60 Hz | 300 Hz | 144 Hz | 120 Hz | 120 Hz | 120 Hz |
| Ports | 2x USB-C, 2x USB-A, 1x HDMI, 1x SD card reader, 1x headphone jack | 1x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A 2x USB 4.0 Gen 3 Type-C support display / power delivery 1x HDMI 2.1 TMDS 1x 3.5mm Combo Audio Jack SD 4.0 card reader | Thunderbolt 4 x 3, MagSafe, HDMI and SD | 2x USB 4, Surface Connect | 2x USB4 Type C, 2x USB-A, 1x HDMI, 1x 3.5mm jack | 1 HDMI 2 USB Type-C 1 USB3.2 MicroSD Multi-media Card Reader 1 Headphone out/Mic-in Combo | 3x USB-C, 1x USB-A | 2 Thunderbolt |
1x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A (data speed up to 5Gbps) 2x Thunderbolt |
1 x HDMI 1 x Headphone / Mic 1 x RJ-45 1 x SD Card Reader 2 x USB 3.2 1 x USB 4.0 Type-C PD/Display | – USB 3.2 x 2 – Thunderbolt 4 x 2 – HDMI 2.1 x 1 – 3.5 mm jack – Ethernet jack | 2x USB-C, 1x USB-A, 1x 3.5mm | 1 Global headset jack 1 Full sized SD card (push-pull), 1 RJ45 Ethernet port, 5GbE 2 USB Type-A 3.2 Gen 1 (5 Gbps) 1 USB Type-A 3.2 Gen 1 (5 Gbps) with PowerShare, 2 Thunderbolt 5 ports | 2x USB4 Type-C, 1x HDMI, 2x USB-A, 1x 3.5mm combo jack | 2 x USB-C® (Thunderbolt |
1x HDMI, 2x USB-C, 2x USB-A, headphone jack | 2xUSB-C, 2xUSB-A, HDMI 2.1, microSD |
| Audio (Power output) | – | – | – | – | – | – | 4 W | – | – | – | – | – | 2 W | 6 W | – | – | – |
| GPU | Nvidia RTX 5070 | AMD Radeon 890M iGPU | Apple M4 | Qualcomm Adreno GPU | Intel Arc 140V | – | AMD Radeon 8060 iGPU | Intel Arc iGPU | Intel Arc 140T iGPU | Nvidia RTX 5090 | Nvidia RTX 5070 Ti | Qualcomm Adreno | Nvidia RTX 5090 | Intel Arc 140V iGPU | Intel Arc 140V iGPU | Intel Arc 130V | Nvidia RTX 5070 |
| RAM | 64GB | 32GB | 16GB, 32GB | 16GB | 16GB | 8GB | 32GB | 32GB | 32GB | 32GB | 32GB | 16GB | 64GB | 32GB | 32GB | 16GB | 8GB |
| Connectivity | – | Bluetooth 5.4, Wifi 7 | Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.3 | Optional LTE | Wifi 6 | Wifi 6E, Bluetooth 5.3 | Wifi 7 | Wifi 7, Bluetooth 5.4 | Wifi 7, Bluetooth 5.4 | Wifi 7 | – | Wifi 6E, Bluetooth 5.3 | Wifi 7, Bluetooth 5.4 | Wifi 7, Bluetooth 5.4 | Wifi 7, Bluetooth 5.4 | Wifi 7, Bluetooth 5.4 | Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4 |
| Colours | – | – | Space Black, Silver | Blue, Silver, Black | – | Blue | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | Black, Silver |
| Display Technology | OLED | OLED | Mini LED | OLED | OLED | OLED | IPS | LCD | OLED | Mini LED | OLED | OLED | IPS | IPS | OLED | OLED | OLED |
| Screen Technology | – | – | IPS | – | – | – | IPS | IPS | – | – | – | – | IPS | IPS | – | – | – |
| Touch Screen | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | No |
| Convertible? | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No |
The SSD (solid state drive) is essentially the component that determines how much storage your laptop has. A 512GB SSD is the norm these days, with anything less making storage space feel cramped if you download a lot of music, photos and videos.
A 2-in-1 laptop is a device that has a flexible hinge, allowing it to be folded up into a tablet form. These laptops often have stylus support too, making them good options for doodlers and creatives.
RAM (Random Access Memory) is computer memory that helps the processor offer a smooth performance. 8GB seems to be the default for laptops these days, with anything less potentially seeing noticeable slowdowns for your computer when performing multiple tasks.
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