Asus has once again pushed the boundaries of portable computing with its new Zenbook A16, a 16-inch laptop that effortlessly blends powerful performance with an impressively lightweight design. Having rigorously tested a pre-production unit at CES, its capabilities for part-time content creation, exceptional battery life, and a vibrant OLED screen were immediately apparent. Now, with the final production model hitting the market at a competitive price of $1,599.99, featuring an astounding 48GB of RAM, the Zenbook A16 stands out as a unique proposition, especially amidst ongoing memory shortages. The initial hardware glitches and software bugs observed in the early unit have been meticulously ironed out, resulting in a polished Windows laptop that offers extensive screen real estate in a remarkably portable and capable package, positioning itself as a compelling alternative to Apple’s 15-inch MacBook Air.
Unpacking the Zenbook A16: Design and Core Specifications
The Asus Zenbook A16, as reviewed, comes in a singular, well-equipped configuration designed for demanding users. It features a robust 18-core Qualcomm Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme X2E-94-100 chip, complemented by a generous 48GB of soldered RAM and a spacious 1TB SSD. This hardware combination promises a smooth and responsive user experience, particularly for multitasking and resource-intensive applications. Beyond its internal prowess, the Zenbook A16 captivates with its sophisticated aesthetics, highlighted by a stunning 16-inch OLED display boasting a 2880 x 1800 resolution and a fluid 120Hz refresh rate. The laptop’s chassis is adorned with Asus’ Ceraluminum coating, which imparts a satiny, lightly textured finish that feels premium to the touch. The unique beige color scheme, described as “peak beige,” offers a refreshing departure from the usual silver and gray laptop palettes, lending the A16 a cozy, distinctive vibe that sets it apart in a crowded market.
A Display That Dazzles
The 16-inch OLED display is arguably one of the Zenbook A16’s most significant assets. With its 3K resolution (2880 x 1800) and 120Hz refresh rate, it delivers incredibly crisp visuals, deep blacks, and vivid colors, making it ideal for creative professionals, multimedia consumption, and everyday productivity. The high refresh rate ensures smooth scrolling and a more responsive visual experience, which is particularly beneficial when working with detailed graphics or watching high-definition videos. The sheer size of the screen, combined with its high quality, enhances productivity by providing ample workspace, reducing the need for external monitors for many users.
The Distinctive “Couchouflage” Aesthetic
Asus has made a conscious effort to differentiate the Zenbook A16 not just through performance but also through design. The Ceraluminum coating not only contributes to the laptop’s lightweight nature but also provides a unique tactile experience. The “Zabriskie Beige” color, playfully dubbed “couchouflage,” gives the laptop a warm, inviting feel that is less corporate and more personal. This design choice, while subjective, certainly adds to the Zenbook A16’s appeal for users looking for a device that stands out with understated elegance rather than flashy design elements.
Performance Benchmarks: Snapdragon X2 Elite Takes On The Competition
While the pre-production unit of the Zenbook A16 wasn’t subjected to a full benchmark suite, the final retail model with its advanced Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme chip has undergone extensive testing across various platforms, including Geekbench, Cinebench 2026, Puget Bench, and Blender. The results confirm its impressive capabilities, challenging established benchmarks set by competitors.
Head-to-Head with MacBook Air M5
In direct comparison with the 15-inch M5 MacBook Air, a primary target for the Zenbook A16, Apple’s silicon still holds an edge in many head-to-head tests. However, the Zenbook A16 demonstrates remarkable strength in multi-threaded CPU performance, scoring significantly higher in Geekbench 6 CPU Multi (22044 vs 16567) and Cinebench 2026 Multi (6327 vs 3413). This indicates its superior ability to handle workloads that can distribute tasks across multiple cores, such as complex data processing, video rendering, or running multiple applications simultaneously. Furthermore, the Zenbook A16 nearly matches the MacBook Air in the CPU-intensive Puget Bench Photoshop test (10931 vs 11513), showcasing its robust performance for demanding creative tasks. While the M5 MacBook Air still leads in single-core performance and overall GPU benchmarks (Geekbench 6 GPU OpenCL: 41101 vs 47661), the Zenbook A16 proves itself a very capable contender, especially for users who prioritize multi-core heavy lifting on a Windows platform.
Outperforming Intel’s Zenbook Duo
The Zenbook A16 also delivers a strong showing against Intel-powered rivals, specifically the Asus Zenbook Duo (2026) equipped with an Intel Core Ultra X9 388H (Panther Lake) chip. In both single-core (Geekbench 6 CPU Single: 3643 vs 3009) and multi-core CPU performance tests (Geekbench 6 CPU Multi: 22044 vs 17268), the Zenbook A16 decisively outperforms its Intel counterpart. This highlights the efficiency and power of Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X2 Elite architecture. However, the Zenbook Duo, with its beefier Arc B390 GPU, gains a significant advantage in graphics-intensive tasks (Geekbench 6 GPU OpenCL: 56839 vs 41101, 3DMark Time Spot: 9847 vs 5289). This trade-off is reflected in the price, as the Zenbook Duo commands a premium of $700 more than the A16, largely due to its enhanced graphics capabilities and dual-screen design.
Real-World Productivity: A Creator’s Companion
Beyond synthetic benchmarks, the Zenbook A16’s performance translates directly into a smooth real-world user experience. Editing 50-megapixel RAW files in Adobe Lightroom Classic, for example, feels remarkably fluid, akin to the performance of Apple’s M4 and M5 MacBooks. This responsiveness extends even when operating on battery power, allowing content creators to remain productive on the go without being tethered to an outlet. The substantial 48GB of RAM plays a crucial role here, enabling users to manage large files and complex projects without encountering slowdowns or memory bottlenecks.
Beyond Raw Power: Battery Life and User Experience
The Zenbook A16 excels not only in raw performance but also in practical aspects like battery longevity and overall user experience, making it a well-rounded device for daily use.
All-Day Endurance
One of the standout features, consistent with many Snapdragon-powered laptops, is the Zenbook A16’s impressive battery life. It comfortably lasts through an entire eight-hour workday of mixed usage, which typically includes browsing with multiple Chrome tabs, engaging in video calls, and streaming media. In a test scenario involving nearly 90 minutes of video calls interspersed with other tasks, the laptop still retained 30 percent of its battery life by the end of the day, proving its reliability for extended periods away from a power source. This level of endurance is a significant advantage for mobile professionals and students alike.
Ergonomics and Audio
The Zenbook A16 boasts a thoughtfully designed physical interface. Its hinge allows for effortless one-finger opening, a small but appreciated detail that speaks to its premium build. The keyboard offers a pleasant typing experience with deeper key travel compared to MacBooks, contributing to reduced typing fatigue during long sessions. The mechanical trackpad is solid and responsive, hinged at the top but providing satisfying clicks across its lower half. While the downward-and-outward-firing speakers deliver decent and relatively full sound, they do lack the deep bass found in some competitors, and their placement means sound can be partially muffled when the laptop is resting on one’s lap. Although it may not match the audio prowess of the 15-inch MacBook Air, the overall audio experience is more than adequate for most users.
Connectivity Options
Asus has equipped the Zenbook A16 with a practical array of ports. On the right side, users will find a traditional USB-A port, alongside a highly convenient SD card slot – a feature often absent in modern thin-and-light laptops, much to the dismay of photographers and videographers. The left side hosts an HDMI port for external display connectivity, a versatile USB4 port (offering high-speed data transfer and power delivery), and an audio jack. This selection ensures that most peripherals and external displays can be connected without the need for additional dongles, enhancing its utility for various workflows.
The Achilles’ Heel: Gaming on Windows on Arm
Despite its numerous strengths, the Zenbook A16, like all Arm-based Windows laptops, faces a significant hurdle in the realm of gaming. While Qualcomm has made commendable efforts to expand game compatibility on Windows on Arm, increasing the number of supported titles from an initial 1,200 to over 2,400, this figure remains a mere fraction compared to the vast library available on x86 Windows machines.
Progress Yet Pitfalls
The inclusion of Easy Anti-Cheat support is a positive step, allowing popular titles like Fortnite to be playable on Snapdragon laptops. However, the experience is not universally smooth. Some games that also utilize Easy Anti-Cheat, such as Elden Ring Nightreign, still fail to run, highlighting inconsistencies in compatibility. This “game roulette” forces users to constantly check for support, a frustrating experience reminiscent of the limitations faced by Mac users. For a platform that historically prides itself on broad game compatibility, this is a significant drawback.
The Ecosystem Challenge
To truly compete as a “MacBook Air killer” in every sense, Qualcomm and Microsoft must intensify their efforts to engage more developers and publishers. The momentum needs to accelerate, ensuring that a wider array of games are optimized or made compatible with the Arm architecture. Until then, the inability to play virtually any desired game, even with “potato-quality graphics” on an integrated GPU, remains a major impediment for many Windows users, myself included. The appeal of Windows often lies in its gaming versatility, and the current state of Arm gaming on Windows diminishes this core advantage.
Zenbook A16: A Compelling Choice, But For Whom?
The Asus Zenbook A16 represents a significant stride forward for Windows on Arm laptops, offering a blend of performance, design, and battery life that makes it a genuinely intriguing alternative in the premium laptop segment.
Value Proposition in a Shifting Market
The Zenbook A16’s pricing at $1,599.99 for a configuration featuring 48GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD is remarkably competitive, especially when considering the current global memory shortage that has driven up RAM prices elsewhere. This aggressive pricing strategy positions it as an excellent value proposition for users who require substantial memory for professional applications or intense multitasking without breaking the bank. It challenges the notion that premium performance and ample RAM must come at an exorbitant cost, especially when compared to similarly specced x86 or even Apple silicon machines.
Weighing the Alternatives
While the Zenbook A16 may not be a definitive “MacBook Air killer” due to the ongoing gaming limitations on Windows on Arm, it is certainly more than just an “also-ran.” For users who are deeply entrenched in the Windows ecosystem, require a large, vibrant display, demand excellent multi-threaded performance for productivity and content creation, and prioritize exceptional battery life in a lightweight chassis, the Zenbook A16 is a highly attractive option. However, for those whose primary use case involves gaming, the current state of Windows on Arm might still lead them towards traditional x86 Windows laptops or even the MacBook Air if gaming isn’t a top priority. For users seeking even more power or a broader selection of ports (beyond the A16’s useful SD card slot), the entry-level 14-inch MacBook Pro remains a powerful alternative, though it comes with the trade-off of being a chunkier and significantly heavier device. The Zenbook A16 distinguishes itself by offering a refreshing twist: a large-screen laptop that is surprisingly light, delivers very good performance, and boasts ample RAM to comfortably navigate the demands of modern software and the challenges of memory supply.
Conclusion
The Asus Zenbook A16 emerges as a highly competitive and compelling offering in the lightweight 16-inch laptop category. It masterfully combines an elegant, distinctive design with the potent performance of Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme chip, an outstanding OLED display, and remarkable battery life. While it successfully addresses many of the criticisms leveled against earlier Windows on Arm devices, particularly in general productivity and content creation, the current state of gaming compatibility remains its most notable limitation. Despite this, its generous 48GB of RAM at an attractive price point makes it an exceptional value, especially for professionals and power users seeking a portable workstation with extensive screen real estate. The Zenbook A16 proves itself to be a formidable and unique alternative to the MacBook Air, carving out its own niche by offering a distinct blend of features and performance within the Windows ecosystem. Let’s hope Asus maintains this competitive pricing and continues to drive the innovation of Arm-based Windows laptops forward, providing robust options for an evolving market.
Asus Zenbook A16 Specs (as reviewed)
- Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme X2E-94-100 (18 cores)
- Graphics: Adreno X2-90
- RAM: 48GB (soldered)
- Storage: 1TB SSD
- Display: 16-inch, 2880 x 1800 OLED, 120Hz
- Operating System: Windows on Arm
- Ports: 1x USB-A, 1x SD Card Slot, 1x HDMI, 1x USB4, 1x Audio Jack
- Design: Ceraluminum coating, Zabriskie Beige color
- Price as tested: $1,599.99
Photography by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge

