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Review: Asus Vivobook 14 Copilot+ PC

Terrible color accuracy ruins what is an otherwise great budget Windows laptop.
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Photograph: Luke-Larsen; Getty Images
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Rating:

6/10

WIRED
Fantastic battery life. Keyboard and touchpad are surprisingly solid. Lots of onboard memory and storage.
TIRED
Terrible screen quality. Plastic chassis looks and feels cheap. A bit thick.

Everything changed last year for Windows laptops. For the first time, Qualcomm's Arm-based Snapdragon processors brought all the efficiency Mac users love to Windows, resulting in some of the fastest and longest-lasting laptops we’ve ever seen, like the Surface Laptop 7.

But if all that goodness is only reserved for expensive, high-end laptops, it’ll never truly change the PC landscape. That’s what makes a laptop like the Asus Vivobook 14 X so important. It employs Qualcomm’s entry-level Snapdragon X chip, and while there are some shortcomings, the battery life alone makes this a smart choice for folks on a tight budget.

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Photograph: Luke Larsen

Cheaper Than It Sounds

While $700 might not sound that cheap for a laptop, the details matter because this Vivobook 14 is more than just an entry-level machine. The base configuration comes with 16 GB of RAM and 512 GB of storage, so it qualifies as a Copilot+ PC and can access a few of Microsoft's artificial intelligence features.

If this laptop had a cheaper starting configuration, it would have been closer to $500. That’s important when considering the value of the Vivobook 14, because really, the Vivobook 14 is a more highly configured $500 laptop, not a true mid-tier device. That has both huge advantages and a couple of significant compromises.

The pricing in the context of Snapdragon X Plus and X Elite laptops matters too. These laptops with their more powerful processors originally started at $999 (and many with just 256 GB of storage), but a lot of those prices have dropped. For example, you can now get an HP OmniBook X for $680, which gets you a faster processor and a better display.

When you compare it to the M1 MacBook Air, which currently sells for $50 less, the Vivobook 14 offers double the RAM, four times the storage, better multi-monitor support, and even a more powerful neural processing unit that's capable of up to 45 tera operations per second (TOPS) of AI performance.

Elephant in the Room

Here’s where I stop and tell you about the Vivobook 14’s Achilles’ heel: It has a really poor screen. If there’s one aspect of this laptop that feels like a $500 laptop instead of a $700 machine, it’s undoubtedly the display. What you get is a 1,920 x 1,200-pixel resolution, 14-inch nontouch LCD panel. That’s not particularly sharp, but it’s standard for this price. It’s a matte screen, meaning it’s good at deflecting glare but isn’t as clear as glossy panels.

The display is dim enough that I was using it at max brightness almost all the time, reaching only a high of 280 nits. The colors are really what threw me off. I noticed how off all the colors looked right when I booted up Windows for the first time. The screen has a sickly green tint and looks desaturated. I tossed my colorimeter on, and it confirmed what I was seeing. The panel covered just 66 percent of the sRGB color space and 50 percent of AdobeRGB, while the color accuracy was some of the worst I’ve seen on a laptop in years, with a Delta-E of 7.22. This is not a laptop you want to do photo editing on or spend a lot of time consuming content on.

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Photograph: Luke-Larsen

The speakers don’t do much to complement the experience either. They aren’t noticeably worse than most laptops, but are tinny and unenjoyable. They’re there and are enough to cover you when you need them.

I won’t lie and say the screen quality doesn’t seriously detract from the experience of using this laptop. It takes it down several notches in my book. But for a student or remote worker looking for an affordable, long-lasting machine with some oomph behind it, this one will do.