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This review first appeared in issue 349 of PC Pro.
When you think of Asusâ Vivobook range, cheap laptops probably spring to mind. So you may wonder whatâs going on here: a Vivobook costing ÂŁ2,500? Surely thatâs more Asus ROG gaming laptop territory? Dig into the specs and it sounds like a gaming machine, too, with a turbo-fueled Core i9 matched with 32GB of DDR5 RAM and Nvidia RTX 4070 graphics.
Here, though, Asus has creators in its sights rather than gamers. It comes loaded with Nvidiaâs Studio drivers, a Pantone-validated OLED screen and even a clever dial built into the touchpad. But letâs start with the fundamentals: power.
Top guns, part one
Itâs easy to get blasĂ© about such things, but I still find it remarkable to say that there are 24 cores inside this laptop. Thatâs because Asus has opted for a Core i9-13980HX processor, which is as boy racer as it sounds. The 13980 indicates that itâs right at the top end of Intelâs family, a fact reinforced by the H suffix (which stands for high performance). The X is the overclocking cherry on top.
All this would be for naught if Asus had skimped on cooling, but a double fan and meaty heatsinks mean that the CPU should keep running at its peak speeds â 5.6GHz for the eight performance P-cores â even under duress. No wonder it can gobble up to 105W.
Itâs also why this laptop returned such stonking speeds in our CPU-torture tests. A result of 16,581 in Geekbench 6.1 multicore is as fast as weâve seen from a laptop, making me nervous that our new graphs should have a higher peak than 20,000. This supreme speed was repeated in Cinebench R23âs multicore section, where it scorched its way to 25,660.
Top guns, part two
The RTX 4070 doesnât sit at the top of Nvidiaâs mobile range, but itâs still a potent chip. Its main weapons are the 4,608 CUDA cores, which sounds like a huge number when compared to the RTX 4060 (3,072) but surprisingly few next to the 7,424 of the RTX 4080 and 9,728 of the RTX 4090 (to be clear, these numbers refer to the laptop versions of Nvidiaâs chips).
How many CUDA cores you have matters in professional applications such as 3ds Max, Catia and Maya â while there isnât a linear relationship, itâs a great indicator of how long tasks will take â so there are reasons to opt for an RTX 4080 or 4090. Especially as those products come with far superior memory setups: the RTX 4070 includes 8GB of GDDR6 RAM with a 128-bit interface width, but switch to the 4080 and you get 12GB/192-bit, while a 4090 offers 16GB/256-bit. Thatâs a huge jump.
However, the RTX 4070 has power efficiency in its favor, getting by on up to 115W (35W minimum) compared to 150W for its siblings. Itâs also the reason why this laptop costs ÂŁ2,500 rather than ÂŁ3,000 or ÂŁ3,500.
The good news is that with a Core i9 and 32GB of RAM as the backing cast, the RTX 4070 here is given every chance to excel. I first saw this in our suite of gaming tests. Taking the 1080p High results first, the Vivobook returned 225fps in F1 2022, 93fps in Metro Exodus Enhanced, 183fps in Shadow of the Tomb Raider and 86fps in Dirt 5.
Switching to the panelâs native resolution of 3,200 x 2,000, those results dropped to 116fps (F1 2022), 49fps (Metro), 95fps (Tomb Raider) and 49fps (Dirt 5). In our toughest test, Metro Exodus Enhanced at Extreme settings, the Vivobook returned 48fps at 1080p and 25fps at native resolution. In other words, its only unplayable frame rates came in that final, brutal test.
Creative spin
All those results were with Nvidiaâs Studio drivers, as supplied; if you know youâll be using this machine only for gaming then switch to the Game Ready drivers for the latest optimizations. Asus clearly expects people to use this laptop for creativity, however, so I also put it through its paces in Specviewperf R20.
Here, it performed in line with expectations for an RTX 4070 laptop. Highlights included 91 in the 3ds Max viewset, 335 in Maya and 238 in SolidWorks; to put those scores in perspective, the Lenovo P620 Tower scored 147, 439 and 278 respectively. Those results are significantly higher, but so they should be for a desktop workstation with a Threadripper Pro 5945WX and Nvidiaâs RTX A4000 graphics.
Asus loves to add little extras to its touchpads, and here thatâs a DialPad. This is a dotted circle, with an inch diameter, that sits at the top left of the touchpad, but you need to activate it: press and hold the tiny symbol at the top right of the pad, then swipe in. Itâs a clunky mechanism, but this stops you accidentally switching the dial on and off.
Once active, a white circle within the dotted lines lights up. Press it, and the Asus dial overlay appears on-screen, with different options depending on context. In Photoshop, for instance, it offers the chance to cycle through brush sizes, switch between documents, zoom in and out of layers and quickly undo changes. Itâs no substitute for a physical dial, but creatives with dexterous fingers may grow fond of it.
Getting physical
I ended up leaving the dial on most of the time, as the touchpad is large enough (130 x 83mm) that it didnât interfere with navigation. With a glass coating it ticks the usual smooth and responsive boxes, although I occasionally found myself reaching for the F6 key to deactivate the whole thing as palm rejection didnât always work.
Nor will those people who type for a living love this keyboard, which offers surprisingly little travel for a laptop that measures 21mm thick. The keys themselves offer little âfeelâ, with a lifeless action, but once you move past this and the single-height Enter key (oddly jammed next to the hash key and finished in the same dark grey) the keyboard fades into the inoffensive background.
And there are a couple of positives. All the keys are a generous size and have a sensible gap between them, helping to minimize typos, the spacebar is huge and, while the cursor keys are shortened, theyâre also separated from the main buttons. Plus, a dedicated number pad makes sense in a laptop this width.
Super size
This machine is no ultraportable.
Whichever dimension you measure, itâs chunky. A 356 x 249mm footprint means youâll need a good-sized rucksack to carry it with you, and while Asus officially states the weight as 1.9kg thatâs for the more basic spec: I weighed it at 2.1kg. The 21mm thickness refers to the front of the chassis; once you factor in the orange âfootâ â a U-shape strip that lifts the Vivobook from a surface to aid airflow â itâs closer to 2.5mm.
I like the brash orange color (echoed in the Esc key) as it lifts what is otherwise quite a boring-looking design. Asus also makes this Vivobook in black, but the silver version I tested is unlikely to gain any lustful glances from passersby. Its only other flash of styling is a raised area on the lid â almost like a melded-on business card â that reveals the laptopâs name.
Rather than style, then, this laptop is designed for practicality. Head to the left and youâll find a gigabit Ethernet port, full-size SD card reader, USB-A 3.2 Gen 1 (5Gbits/sec) port and the power connector. Over on the right, a 3.5mm jack and HDMI 2.1 output are kept company by two Thunderbolt 4 (USB-C) ports and a second USB-A port. Thatâs a strong connectivity offering, backed up by Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3.
Power down
To get the most out of this laptop, though, youâll need to keep it plugged in. I found that battery life varied considerably during my tests, but set your expectations at around four hours â hardly a full working day. And in PCMarkâs Gaming test, which pushes the graphics chip in the same way creative graphics tasks will, it lasted only 1hr 41mins.
You can trickle-charge it using the Thunderbolt ports, but I canât imagine travelling without the 540g power supply. Considering its 240W output, itâs surprisingly compact, and it takes the laptop from empty to 80% in an hour, reaching full capacity in less than two hours.
Youâll probably keep it plugged in much of the time, in which case I recommend you fully investigate the MyAsus app. From here you can switch on the battery care mode, adjust the fan profile (we tested with Performance mode, and the fans get noisy when youâre pushing this machine), and play around with âTaskFirstâ, which allows you to set network connectivity priorities â to game streaming, say, or communication apps.
Thereâs also a bunch of options for the microphone, and unlike many âAI optimizationsâ Iâve tried, this is worth using. Thereâs nothing wrong with the plain mode, but the âsingle presenter conference callâ option will bring your voice to the fore. Thanks to the excellent 1080p webcam, which supports Windows Hello and includes a fiddly but effective privacy shutter, youâll look great on calls, too.
Entertain me
I have mixed feelings about the speakers, but thatâs mainly due to the high expectations set elsewhere. If you listen to music in isolation on the Vivobook then youâll be impressed by its volume and how clearly instruments and voices emerge â the intricate instrumentation of Björk is normally too much for laptops, but the Vivobook handles the mix of strings and vocals well. Where it falls down is bass, pushing the trebles and mids too much to the fore, but Iâm being picky.
Certainly youâll love watching films on this laptop thanks to its sheer volume (with no sign of distortion), and it helps that Asus includes a top-quality OLED panel. It barely needs saying, but a 3,200 x 2,000 resolution ensures sharp edges on text, and black absolutely punches through to make dark scenes in films look fantastic.
It has DisplayHDR 600 Black certification, confirming that it will hit 600cd/m2 in HDR content, while its peak of 389cd/m2 in SDR mode means itâs easy to read in every condition. Except, as it turns out, bright sunshine, where the screenâs reflectivity became obvious.
Inside, though, itâs superb. You can choose from a variety of settings in the MyAsus app, but for testing I stuck to the standard mode and then switched between the preset gamuts: Native, sRGB, DCI-P3 and Display P3. Native makes most sense if you want to enjoy the widest color range (it stretches 19% beyond even the DCI-P3 gamut), but sRGB and DCI-P3 locked the screen down to those gamuts almost perfectly.
Color accuracy is strong â its average Delta-E never went above 0.72, with anything under one considered excellent â and anyone who values true whites will be pleased by a natural color temperature of 6479K, only 21K off the target 6500K.
Final thoughts
If youâre a demanding user, then, this is almost a perfect laptop. It even has the opportunity to upgrade over time: the 32GB of memory comes supplies as two 16GB SODIMMs, rather than being embedded, and if youâre a nimble hand with a Phillips screwdriver you can whip the bottom off this chassis within a minute.
This will reveal the fact that the 1TB M.2 2280 SSD is also replaceable, and note this isnât the speediest Gen 4 drive around: 4,061MB/sec reads and 2,971MB/sec writes are strong but not exceptional. I would be tempted to replace it with a faster 2TB drive at some future date; sadly there isnât a second M.2 slot, despite the amount of space available on the board.
Then again, we need to remember that this isnât a ÂŁ3,000+ mobile workstation. While hardly cheap at ÂŁ2,500, it rewards you with all the power and quality that most creative professionals need. In terms of price, thatâs certainly competitive when placed next to an equivalent 16in MacBook Pro. And yes, that laptop offers far superior battery life, minimal fan noise and better performance away from the mains, but it lacks the graphical grunt of Nvidiaâs RTX chip along with easy upgrades.
Whether the Vivobook Pro is right for you, then, depends entirely on what you intend to use it for. All I can tell you is that Asus extracts the most from its components, while the supporting cast â particularly the screen â come from the top drawer in terms of quality.
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