Apple's thinnest laptop is powerful for most tasks. Still, there may be better options above and below it.
The MacBook Neo isn't trying to be anything but what it is—a solid MacBook experience for $600.
Apple’s enormously expensive M5 Max MacBook Pro has more power than the laptop can handle, literally.
This 2-in-1 laptop bundle comes with a case, a stylus, and way too much love for GoPro.
The return of the Dell XPS offers us a great PC—with an odd keyboard and a depressing price.
Intel’s Panther Lake shines, but more than that, this laptop proves two screens are better than one.
It's got an incredibly bright OLED screen with performance that will keep you from using it for much else than work.
You can't have everything, even for $4,000, but the MSI Raider 18 HX offers enough performance for 4K.
Whether you're looking to game or increase your productivity, we've found the best laptop for you.
The 2025 version of the modular and repairable 16-inch laptop now has the GPU power for AAA gaming.
Believe it or not, you want a laptop with stylus support on the trackpad.
The M5 chip is faster, but it's also stretching the limits of what Apple's laptop design can handle.
The power brick is almost as heavy as the gaming laptop, but damn does it run well and look beautiful.
Even with an imperfect trackpad, Razer's new 14-inch gaming laptop has tons of performance to meet all your needs.
The Alienware Area-51 proves a good keyboard is enough to overlook most gaming laptop shortcomings.
Lenovo's ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 Rollable is the best realization of flexible screens yet on a laptop, but the price is steep.
As much as the silly AniMe lights draw the most attention, it's what's happening underneath this massive gaming laptop that matters most.
The Lenovo Chromebook Plus 14 is the kind of companion that doesn't want to do anything but watch movies and cuddle.
The HP Omen Max 16 pairs with HyperX mice and headsets without the need for wireless USB dongles.
MSI's TItan 18 HX gaming laptop is the desktop replacement that comes extremely close to the power (and obscene cost) of an actual desktop PC.