
Alienware's subtle new Aurora 16 laptops still promise space-age performance
The name might sound familiar if you've been gaming for a while: Aurora laptops have been lost in space for two decades now, but Alienware has guided this reborn version down to earth with a choice of Intel chipsets, Nvidia 5000-series graphics, and a one-touch Stealth mode for when RGB illumination isn't the vibe to go for.
Announced at the PAX East gaming event, the Alienware Aurora 16 and Aurora 16X swap the desktop replacement-style rear shelf of the Area 51 flagship laptop line for a more traditional laptop look. They'll more easily slip in a 16in laptop bag as a result, with contoured edges all round and a satin finish that adds a little extra grip. Handy, given it'll be spending a lot more time on the road than the firm's bigger, badder models.
Alienware's raised thermal shelf design sticks around, leaving plenty of room for an unrestricted supply of cool air to the internal hardware. The backlit keyboard and illuminated Alien head logo on the lid haven't gone anywhere either, but pressing the Stealth mode button (indicated by the teensy silhouette of a B-2 Spirit stealth bomber on the F7 key) swaps all the lights to a subtle white. This'll also put the laptop in a battery-friendly power mode to eek out a little more time away from the mains, and silence the internal cooling fans.
Each laptop still has its power and HDMI ports at the rear, along with a brace of USB A and C ports, for cleaner desktop use. The single USB-A, 3.5mm audio combo jack and Ethernet port at the left side keep the right side free so as not to get in the way of a gaming mouse.
Once you've clocked off, though, the more potent Aurora 16X should be able to tackle just about any game. It can be specced up to an Intel Core Ultra 9 CPU and Nvidia RTX 5070 graphics, with 155W of total power shared between them. The 16in screen is a QHD+ LCD number good for 240Hz refresh rates and 500 nits of brightness. With a big enough wallet you can then equip it with 64GB of RAM, 4TB of SD storage, and a 96Whr battery.
The more mainstream Aurora 16 has a lower power ceiling, with up to 115W split between its Core i7 or i9 processor and RTX 5000 series graphics. It gets up to 32GB of RAM, 2TB of storage and a 120Hz, 300nit LCD screen, with a choice of 60 or 96Whr batteries.
With Nvidia's latest GPU line commanding eye-watering prices, the 5070 might be this generation's laptop sweet spot. Alienware will also offer the Aurora 16 with RTX 4000 and RTX 3000 GPUs if you're looking to keep costs in check.
Alienware will open pre-orders imminently, with prices set to start from $1149 in the USA. European and UK pricing has yet to be revealed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Stuff.tv
17 hours ago
- Stuff.tv
This robot vac might be the best at mopping I've ever seen
I've tested far too many robot vacuums. And as much as I love the machines, mopping often leaves something to be desired. When I've been testing robot vacs, they've often struggled to mop up stains on hard floors. But Dreame's latest release might finally fix this. The Aqua 10 Ultra Roller Complete is the brand's newest entry in the Aqua Series. It's possibly the most aggressively over-engineered mop-on-wheels I've ever laid eyes on – in the best way. Read more: Best cordless vacuum cleaners in 2025 for tackling every mess Dreame decided that the soggy cloth or mop pad approach of every other robot vac on the market was no longer cutting it. Instead of dragging a grubby rag around your floor, the Aqua 10 Ultra goes all-in with a full-blown roller mop that rinses itself in real time. It spins at 100 RPM, sprays water from 12 separate nozzles, and scrapes the dirty muck into a separate tank. Then there's the FluffRoll. It spins in the opposite direction behind the main roller at 1000 RPM, fluffing the mop fibres mid-clean. Apparently, this makes it better at dealing with grout lines and stubborn dried-on nonsense. Does your current robot mop do that? Didn't think so. And you won't have to worry about soggy carpets – the AutoSeal roller guard drops down like a moisture-proof curtain the moment it senses carpet or a rug. There's also the ThermoHub system, which finishes every cleaning session with a self-sanitising blast of 100°C water. But it's not just a mop – Dreame's thrown in everything else you'd expect from a top-tier robot vac. You get AI-powered obstacle avoidance from an Nvidia processor, 30000Pa of suction, triple-wheel climbing mechanics, and something called 'ProLeap' legs that let it scale room transitions and small thresholds. It even retracts its LIDAR sensor to duck under furniture. Pet Care 4.0 knows to dodge food bowls, litter trays, and pets. It even works with Matter, so it syncs seamlessly into your smart home system. We don't have pricing or exact release dates just yet, but Dreame's Aqua 10 Ultra Roller Complete is slated to land sometime in at the end of 2025. We'll bring you the latest when the dust-sucker is available.


Stuff.tv
13-06-2025
- Stuff.tv
I found the Medion Erazer Beast 16 X1 delivers maximum laptop graphics for minimal cash
Stuff Verdict Puts performance ahead of flashy features and slim dimensions, and is all the better for it. The Erazer Beast 16 X1 doesn't have the personality of its rivals, but you won't care once you start gaming Pros RTX 5080 has serious gaming oomph Desktop performance is rock solid Not short on connectivity Cons Gets pretty loud under load Numberpad feels squeezed in Not especially slim or light Introduction Laptop gaming can feel like a rich person's pursuit right now. The latest Nvidia mobile graphics cards might boast fabulous frame rates, but they also demand mortgage payment-level prices – especially if you're after one of the top-tier versions. The Erazer Beast 16 X1 could be an exception to that rule; at the time of writing, Medion's 16in machine is the most affordable way into RTX 5080 ownership. Now I'm in no way saying £2500 (roughly $3400, although Medion kit isn't easy to come by in the US) is a bargain, but the brand has come a long way from the days of being a supermarket special. The Beast 16 X1 is a heck of a lot of hardware for your cash, with an esports-grade refresh rate, massive amounts of SSD storage, and a proper powerhouse of an Intel CPU. That could put it into contention with the best gaming laptops from more well-known brands. The similarly priced Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 AI makes do with a more mid-range GPU, half the storage, and a slower refresh rate screen; an MSI Stealth A18 AI+ also gets 5070 Ti power, yet costs more. Does that make the Medion something of a value champ? How we test laptops Every laptop reviewed on Stuff is tested using industry standard benchmarks and apps to assess performance and battery life. We use our years of experience to judge display, sound and general usability. Manufacturers have no visibility on reviews before they appear online, and we never accept payment to feature products. Find out more about how we test and rate products. Design & build: stealthy gamer The Erazer Beast 16 X1 isn't a scratch-build of the sort you'd get from Asus or Razer; Medion has instead taken an off-the-shelf chassis and added a few bespoke tweaks, like the subtle logo on the lid. The all-metal construction is still pretty slick (if a little too keen to highlight fingerprint smudges) and while I wouldn't call it especially slim, the tapered shape means dimensions have mostly been kept in check. That includes the protruding section at the rear. These have quickly become the norm for gaming laptops, as they leave plenty of room for cooling. It only pokes out a small way here, so I was able to slide the Erazer into my rucksack without any issues. The colour-changing LED light strip at the front edge then really hammers home this laptop's intended purpose. Bumping the power, HDMI and mini DP ports to the rear help keep cables out of sight when sat at a desk. There's also a USB 4 Type-C port, so you're not short on options for hooking up an external display. The two extra holes to the side are for Medion's external water cooling kit – though at the time of writing it only seemed to be on sale in Germany, for a considerable €250. Connectivity is decent at the sides, too, with a full-size SD card reader and two USB-A ports on the right, and one USB-C, one USB-A, a 3.5mm headphone port and an Ethernet input on the left. You'll appreciate that last one if the thought of playing games over a spotty Wi-Fi connection sends shivers down your spine. You won't find a fingerprint sensor, but the webcam supports Windows Hello facial recognition. Its integrated privacy shutter is a nice touch. At 2.67kg this is no lightweight, and you'll also have to factor in the substantial power brick when packing up to play away from home. The skinniest gaming laptops do admittedly come at a premium, however, and this is far from desktop replacement territory. Unless you're wanting a machine to travel with on the daily, this is still perfectly portable. Keyboard & touchpad: just my type You don't get a gaming-grade mechanical keyboard inside the Erazer Beast 16 X1 – but it gets surprisingly close to replicating the feel of one. Each key has a decent amount of travel and a wonderfully springy action. It even sounds satisfying to rattle away at, so long as you aren't constantly bottoming out with every press. Heavy-handed typists take note. There's per-key RGB backlighting, of course -because what self-respecting gaming laptop would go without? Coverage is excellent, really flooding each key with light, and brightness is ample. You can configure it through Medion's software, but the options are more pared-back from what you'll see on rival machines. The mostly full-size QWERTY layout is comfortably spaced out, too, despite having to squeeze up a bit for a half-size numerical keypad. Personally I can live without these on 16in and smaller laptops, as the numbers just feel a little too cramped; I'd rather reach for an external keyboard for any major number crunching. But I get that others will appreciate it being there for when you're working on the go. You won't find any macro buttons, just a row of half-height function keys that double as multimedia shortcuts. I like that the power button sits above the keyboard tray, so you're not likely to hit it accidentally while dancing your fingers over the board mid-multiplayer match. The button next to it toggles through the various performance modes. The touchpad sits slightly off-centre from the screen, but is perfectly placed beneath the middle of the keyboard. It's a respectable size, smooth to slide your finger over, and has a firm mechanical click. Haptic touchpads are becoming more common on high-end gaming laptops, but I didn't miss one here. Most gamers are going to reach straight for a mouse to play anyway. Screen & sound: delivers the goods By giving the Erazer a 2560×1600 resolution screen, Medion hasn't asked too much of the laptop's graphics card while gaming – and hasn't really lost much in terms of visible sharpness or detail compared to a 4K panel when squeezed across 16in. Everything from games to the Windows desktop looked crisp and clear. Viewing angles are really rather good, too, with a huge 180-degrees of screen tilt meaning I didn't have to try hard to find a sweet spot. Using a mini-LED panel gives this laptop a real advantage over IPS rivals in terms of black levels and contrast. Light bloom and leak are well controlled, with even starry night sky scenes (the bane of mini-LED) avoiding much in the way of halo effects. It gets impressively bright, so much so I needed to stick to 50% when gaming at night, and the matte panel finish helps diffuse distracting light reflections without making the image appear too grainy. Would I pay extra for a laptop with an OLED screen? Maybe, if colour coverage and accuracy were mission critical – although both are hardly lacking here. OLED also wins out for response times, but the Erazer's 240Hz refresh rate lets it get close enough to compete. The six speaker array hidden beneath the Erazer's metal shell is a great match to the screen. Four 2W tweeters and two 2W woofers get satisfyingly loud and aren't too stingy when it comes to bass. I still defaulted to a headset when playing games, as they can't match one for positional audio – but they get the job done for video streaming. Performance: Maxed out for most people That the Erazer Beast 16 X1 is a desktop powerhouse shouldn't really come as a surprise; what laptop costing four figures isn't? It helps that the Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX processor has a whopping 24 cores (8 performance cores and 16 efficiency cores), and is pared with 32GB of DDR5 memory. That translates to impeccable Windows performance, as the scores of 3036 and 19284 in the Geekbench 6 single- and multi-core benchmarks attest. It's up there with other gaming laptops around the $3500/£3000 mark, so won't leave you wanting for more oomph for things like video encoding. But that's not really why you're here, is it? The RTX 5080 really is the main attraction. Nvidia's second-best laptop GPU gets 16GB of video memory all to itself, and is an absolute rocket at the Erazer's native resolution. Starting with the older and less demanding Shadow of the Tomb raider, it churned out a gloriously smooth 186fps. In Gears Tactics, I saw 144.2fps with every setting cranked to its highest level – and that was without any DLSS upscaling trickery. Cyberpunk 2077 is a lot more GPU-intensive, but at 1440p using the Ultra details preset it was still able to manage 87.8fps. Ray tracing is still a roadblock to smooth gameplay… unless you know which options to enable. Picking the RT overdrive preset sent Cyberpunk tumbling to a stuttery 20.4fps, but allowing DLSS to work its magic sent that figure stratospheric. With multi-frame generation and ray reconstruction, I saw 149.3fps – a higher figure than it managed at native resolution, with ray tracing disabled. These RTX 5000-exclusive features help it comfortably best laptops with previous-gen RTX 4090 graphics, without any noticeable impact on image quality. While Nvidia will happily sell you an RTX 5090 with even more video memory, the difference in performance can be as small as 5-15% depending on the game – and how well the laptop maker is able to keep the silicon cool. A sufficiently chilled 5080 will outperform a stifled 5090, and leave a far smaller crater on your bank balance in the process. The Erazer puts in a decent shift on that front, letting me play for hours with no negative impact on frame rates – but its internal fans have to kick up to dramatic levels in order to manage it. This is a loud laptop when the going gets tough, which is another reason headphones are recommended when gaming. I was expecting the Erazer to sap its batteries in a blink, but as long as you avoid games it can happily cope with a fair few hours of desktop working. A looping video nudged north of four for me at half brightness. Anything that calls on the Nvidia GPU is going to sap the 99Whr cell significantly quicker, of course. Rivals with AMD internals are still the better bet if you need to stay untethered from mains power for any longer. Medion Erazer Beast 16 X1 verdict Gamers are routinely guilty of lusting after the very best hardware money can buy, but the Erazer Beast 16 X1 proves that you need to look a little closer at components in order to get the best possible value. This laptop's RTX 5080 GPU is an excellent performer, with frame rates that aren't very far short of the far more expensive RTX 5090. Unless you plan on hooking up a 4K monitor, you'll be gaming at high fps for years to come with one of these on your desk. Medion machines have come a long way under Lenovo's stewardship. This one may not have the slimmest or most stylish chassis, a truly gamer-grade keyboard or the best screen, but I'm struggling to see any one area where it truly lets the side down. You'll need to pay a fair bit more if portability is just as important as gaming performance. Stuff Says… Score: 4/5 Puts performance ahead of flashy features and slim dimensions, and is all the better for it. The Medion Erazer Beast 16 X1 doesn't have the personality or portability of its gaming laptop rivals, but you won't care once you start playing. Pros RTX 5080 has serious gaming oomph Desktop performance is rock solid Not short on connectivity Cons Gets pretty loud under load Numberpad feels squeezed in Not especially slim or light Medion Erazer Beast 16 X1 technical specifications Screen 16in, 2560×1600 mini-LED w/ 240Hz Processor Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX 24-core Memory 32GB RAM Graphics Nvidia RTX 5080 Laptop w/ 16GB VRAM Storage 2TB NVMe SSD Operating system Windows 11 Connectivity HDMI, mini DP, 2x USB4, 3x USB 3.2 type-A, 3.5mm headphone port, Ethernet Battery 99Whr Dimensions 357x30x245 mm, 2.67kg


Stuff.tv
10-06-2025
- Stuff.tv
Got an Intel-based Mac? Here's why you'll want to replace it over the next couple of years
One of the things that Apple didn't say during its developer conference keynote talk emerged soon after. During another session at WWDC25 (that Apple calls 'Platforms State of the Union') it was announced that this year's macOS 26 Tahoe will be the last to support Intel-based Mac laptops and desktops. And that's why you'll probably want to upgrade over the next couple of years. That means 2019 and early-to-mid 2020 Macs will lose support earlier than they otherwise would. But by late 2026 when macOS 27 comes out, it will be six years since the last Intel Macs were released and nearly the same amount of time since the first Apple Silicon Macs. Apple will continue to release security updates for three years (presumably from now). So you'll definitely want to have moved on by mid-2028 in my opinion as Apple won't update your Mac against security threats and other things that early computer magazines called 'net nasties'. For macOS Tahoe, Intel-based Macs that meet the system requirements will get access to the new Liquid Glass design, Spotlight and Continuity updates. You'll also get the new Phone app for macOS. As you may know, Intel Macs don't support features like Apple Intelligence. Supported Intel-based Macs include MacBook Pro (16-inch, 2019), MacBook Pro (13-inch, 2020, four Thunderbolt 3 ports), iMac (27-inch, 2020) and Mac Pro (2019). It is a little weird for me looking at that list knowing that some of these machines were some of the most powerful PCs on the market at the time. It's also hard not to feel sorry for those people who bought the 2019 Mac Pro (at great cost, starting at $5,999) when Apple Silicon was only just around the corner (though we were still four years off an Apple Silicon Mac Pro). During its talk, Apple suggested that app developers should complete any outstanding work needed to migrate fully to Apple Silicon saying that it will support the Rosetta emulation technology for macOS 26 and 27 – meaning apps and technologies designed for Intel Macs only can still run. During his address, Apple's senior director of developer relations said: 'Apple Silicon enables us to achieve things that were previously unimaginable and it's time to put all of our focus and innovation there. 'If you've not done so already, now is a great time to help your users migrate to the Apple silicon version of your apps.'