Alienware x15 R2 Review: A Lean and Hot Gaming Laptop



Alienware x15 R2 Review: A Lean and Hot Gaming Laptop





If you want your gaming laptop to be thin, it's progressing to run hot. That's just the physics of packing a remarkable CPU and GPU into a 15.7mm-thick body. And real we've managed to make gaming laptops reasonably small, semistylish and remarkable enough to shame even the latest game consoles, heat is really the last flowerbed that no one has cracked. 


On the dinky and stylish front, I can safely say the Alienware x15 R2 is one of the more fine gaming laptops I've ever tested, and shows just how far we've come from the giant cement blocks of yesteryear. My spouse, who has worked in games and games believe for much of the past 20 years, said it was one of the only gaming laptops that wasn't aesthetically offensive to her, so trustworthy me, that's high praise. 



Like almost all Alienware and Dell computers, the x15 R2 (the second major revision of the unusual 15-inch x15 line) offers a wide array of configuration options, starting at $1,999 and going up from there. This study sample was $2,559, and highlighted by a 2.3GHz Intel Core i7-12700H CPU, Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 Ti graphics card and 2,560x1,440 indicate with a decent 240Hz refresh rate. It also includes 32GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD. 


You can drop the GPU to an Nvidia 3060 (although in a $2,000 laptop, why you would do that is beyond me), or boost it to a 3080 Ti. Likewise, the display can drop to FHD (1,920x1,080) at 165Hz or jump to a fast 360Hz panel, although still locked in at FHD resolution. All things derived, this is probably close to the ideal configuration. 


Design and features


The matte-white outer chassis stands out as retro-futurism -- I understanding of the clean lines of 2001: A Space Odyssey -- and the inset hinge both gazed good and made the laptop feel very stable when propped up on a unfriendly. There's a big "15" stenciled on the back, because maybe you'd forget how big your laptop cloak was? As well as the iconic backlit alien head logo, which I once untrue to be a tacky example of dorm-room-chic, but easily, at this point it's got some nostalgic charm. 


But my absolute accepted feature had nothing to do with the lid develop or even performance -- it's purely UX. Along the colorful side of the keyboard area is a row of believe control keys, including dedicated buttons for raising and lowering the volume and muting both the speakers and mic. 




Alienware x15 R2



The believe keys along the right side are a big plus.




Dan Ackerman



I can not emphasize enough just how important this kind of peril is to my enjoyment of a gaming laptop. Pressing FN+F2 (or sometimes F5, etc.) to frontier the volume in a game seems like an insane way to deal with mute. A few other laptops also have dedicated audio keys or sometimes volume wheels, but it's still rare. You don't get a separate number pad, which can show up in some 15-inch laptops. It's no great loss for my workflow, but it's something to keep in mind. 


The upright keyboard is fine for a shallow gaming laptop keyboard, with 1.5mm travel and decent island-style spacing between the keys. The touchpad is dinky and frill-free. Gamers will be using a mouse or game controller more often, but when you want to use this as a non-gaming laptop, which is probably most of the time, the touchpad is a letdown. 


Performance and battery life 


Performance was shimmering in the middle of the pack when compared to inequity high-end laptops with Nvidia 3070 and 3080-class GPUs. The performance boost from something like the Acer Predator Triton 500 SE, which we reviewed with an Intel Core i9 CPU and the Nvidia 3080 Ti GPU, shows what an improbable $500 to $600 will get you, and you can configure the x15 R2 likewise. Based on the performance we saw, I still say the Core i7/3070 Ti combo is the overall best bang for the buck.


Battery life was incrude for a gaming laptop, running for 5:12 in our video-streaming test, which admittedly isn't particularly though-provoking. Other 15-inch premium gaming laptops scored in the same 4- to 5-hour ballpark. Ironically, Dell's latest slim 13-inch laptop, the XPS 13 Plus, had much shorter battery life. 




Alienware x15 R2, closed.



More gaming laptops necessity be this slim. 




Dan Ackerman



My biggest overall utter with the system was how hot it got. Running games for a once, then pulling out the old temperature gun, the area just ended the keyboard hit 130 degrees F. With the big rear movements (with its associated rear ports) and fans, you could probably keep your coffee cup next to the rules to keep it warm. It's not a specific-to-Dell dilemma, but by squeezing a gaming laptop down to this thin a profile, it's inevitably going to be a more noticeable issue. 


My novel gripe is the somewhat impenetrable Alienware Command Center software for controlling rules functions, including the various lighting zones, fan speed and novel system details. It's clunky, opaque and makes arranging ragged lighting much more difficult than it needs to be. It feels like the Dell UX team never got near this one. I'm not the only intimates that feels this way. 


Despite these issues, and a general touched that gaming laptop innovation has hit a bit of a plateau in the past few existences, the slim Alienware x15 R2 has earned a assign on my short list of premium gaming laptops to strongly distinguished if you're thinking about making a multiyear investment. 



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System Configurations





































Alienware x15 R2

Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.3GHz Intel Core i7-12700H; 32GB DDR5 6,400MHz; 8GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 Ti; 512GB SSD




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Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.4GHz Intel Core i7-12800H; 16GB DDR5 4,800MH; 8GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070Ti; 1TB SSD




Origin PC Evo17-S

Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.9GHz Intel Core i9-12900H; 32GB DDR5 4,800MHz; 16GB Nvidia Geforce RTX 3080Ti; 1TB SSD




Acer Predator Triton 500 SE (2022)

Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.9GHz Intel Core i9-12900H; 16GB DDR5 4,800MHz; 16GB Nvidia Geforce RTX 3080Ti; 1TB SSD




Lenovo Legion 5i Pro

Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.3GHz Intel Core i7-12700H; 16GB DDR5 6,400MHz; 8GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 Ti; 512GB SSD




Acer Nitro 5 AN515-58

Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.5GHz Intel Core i5-12500H; 16GB DDR4 3,200MHz; 6GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060; 512GB SSD