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ASUS ZenBook A16 review: A surprisingly light and powerful 16-inch ultraportable

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Why This Matters

The ASUS ZenBook A16's combination of lightweight design, powerful Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme chips, and premium OLED display marks a significant advancement in ultraportable laptops. This development offers consumers a high-performance, portable option that challenges traditional Intel and AMD-based ultrabooks, potentially reshaping market expectations for mobile computing. For the tech industry, it signals a growing acceptance and integration of ARM-based processors in mainstream laptops, expanding options for manufacturers and users alike.

Key Takeaways

I went into 2025 incredibly amped to review ASUS's 2.2-pound ZenBook A14, only to be disappointed by the lackluster performance of its Snapdragon X chip. I'm still a bit heartbroken, to be honest. But now ASUS is back with a revamped A14 and a larger 16-inch ZenBook A16, both of which sport new Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme chips. The A16 is slightly heavier at 2.6 pounds and 2.9 pounds, but it still competes with LG’s Gram Pro 16. And thanks to Qualcomm's new hardware, it's actually speedy enough to compete with Intel and AMD ultraportables.

Take everything I initially liked about the ZenBook A14 last year — its thin design and portability, its smooth "Ceraluminum" case and its bold OLED screen — stretch it out a bit, and you've got the ZenBook A16. There's an understated beauty to its design that's far more intriguing than ASUS's mainstream notebooks, like the ZenBook 14 OLED from a few years ago, and it's not trying as hard to impress as ASUS's typical gaming notebooks. It's similar to the company's gorgeous Zephyrus G14 and G16 machines, which feel high-end without needing too much gaming bling.

ASUS 85 100 Expert Score ASUS Zenbook A16 The Zenbook A16 is the lightest 16-inch ultraportable we’ve seen yet, and it’s surprisingly capable thanks to Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X2 chips. Pros Surprisingly light

Polished design

Excellent OLED screen

Tons of ports

Big performance leap over X1 chips Cons Potential Arm incompatibilities

Doesn’t support all PC games $1,600 at Best Buy

What struck me first about the A14 last year remains the most intriguing aspect of the A16: It just seems impossibly light for its size. The model I’m testing, which will also be sold at Best Buy, weighs 2.9 pounds due to its glass touchscreen cover. But you can also get a slimmer 2.6-pound version of the A16 at ASUS’s online store.

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