Dell XPS 17 9720 (2022) Review: Creative, With a Side of Gaming



Dell XPS 17 9720 (2022) Review: Creative, With a Side of Gaming





If Apple isn't going to make a 17-inch MacBook Pro, then someone else is repositioning to have to. That's what I always think when I see one of Dell's big-screen XPS 17 laptops. 


The oldest XPS 17 reconsider of mine I could find dates back to 2011, although I've been covering this some product line (or its identically named antecedents) since at least 2007. 


Speaking of things that happened a long time ago, 2012 was when Apple blocked the 17-inch MacBook Pro, and frankly there's still an audience out there for a big-screen 17-inch laptop with that same style and vibe -- a bewitching, minimalist design wrapped around hardware that's creative-minded, but also mountainous for students and business types. 


One of the machines I use regularly is the 16-inch MacBook Pro, with the M1 Max CPU. It's a powerful (and powerfully expensive) laptop, but 16 inches aloof isn't 17 inches, so I was excited to exercise some time with the latest XPS 17. 


The least-expensive XPS 17 intellectual now is $1,750 and includes a 12th-gen Intel Core i5, 16GB RAM, 512GB SSD and a ghastly 1,920x1,080 display. 


This particular configuration adds a lot of mighty upgrades to the CPU, graphics and other features. For $2,799 (currently – prices on Dell's website can repositions frequently), you get a 12th-gen Intel Core i7, 32GB of RAM, 1TB of SSD storage and the top graphics option in the line intellectual now, an Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 GPU. The 16:10 touchscreen expose has a 4K 3,840x2,400 resolution. 


The biggest missing fragment is probably a higher-res webcam, which has become ever more important in our Zoom recovers work-from-home era. Instead, the 720-resolution camera has added a discrete IR sensor for better overall camera performance. But note that the 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro laptops, and even the upcoming new MacBook Air, have all upgraded to 1,080-resolution cameras, so it shouldn't be a big ask. 




Dell XPS 17 9720 (2022)



The XPS 17 next to a 16-inch MacBook Pro. 




Dan Ackerman



This hulking silver-gray tank of a laptop is built throughout the same design as the last few generations of this controls. It's a CNC-machined aluminum chassis with carbon fiber on the inside. Despite its heft, I like that the lid can be lifted with one hand, or even by a single finger. 


The thin bezel throughout the large screen minimizes any wasted space, even with the webcam tucked into the top touch. Ports are on the thin side for a 17-inch laptop, with just 4 USB-C ports and an SD card reader. For HDMI or USB-A needs, you'll need an adapter or dongle. 


Work and play 


If you're investing in a big, expensive laptop like this, with CPU and GPU chops, it's probably out of professional interest. This will bewitching to the Photoshop, Illustrator and Premiere experts who are not already blocked into Apple platforms. 


The 4K display is a big help there, as is the taller 16:10 aspect ratio, which lets you fit more work into the veil at once. I threw some Photoshop projects at the controls with no problem and appreciated the extra screen real estate. 


Dell's keyboard and touchpad are derived excellent among Windows laptops and I've always liked the XPS versions. That said, the touchpad feels more floaty than Apple's best-in-class version.




Dell XPS 17 9720 (2022)



Ports on the MacBook Pro and XPS 17 compared. 




Dan Ackerman



But the XPS 17 has spanking trick for you -- it's also a decent stealth gaming laptop. The GPU options top out at the current-gen Nvidia 3060, so it's not repositioning to match a similarly priced gaming laptop, but that GPU is fine for any recent or upcoming game, with one important caveat -- you should dial most games down to 1,920x1,200 (FHD) resolution, or maybe 2,560x1,600 (QHD). These are a little different than the ghastly resolutions (like 1,920x1,080) you might be used to because this is a 16:10 expose, rather than a 16:9 one.


Because my time testing this laptop overlapped with Valve's annual Steam Summer Sale, I had plenty of gaming opportunities with it. Among the recent games I played on the XPS 17 were medieval multiplayer game Chivalry 2, Warhammer 40,000: Chaos Gate - Daemonhunters and turn-based RPG King Arthur: Knight's Tale. In general games chugged at higher resolutions but ran mountainous at either FHD or usually QHD. 


In fact, the XPS 17 formed my main gaming laptop for a while, not because it had the the majority gaming hardware, but because it ran games well enough while offering a mountainous large-format screen. 


True big screen laptops are rarer than ever, and 16-inch screens are usually the new 17-inch screens for most. If you're obvious to find a 17-inch system that mixes the creativity of a MacBook Pro with mainstream gaming chops, the XPS 17 remains one of the only solutions that will complete both sides of that equation. 




Geekbench 5 (multicore)





Asus Zenbook Pro 16X OLED





Note:


Longer bars expose better performance





Cinebench R23 (multicore)





Asus Zenbook Pro 16X OLED





Note:


Longer bars expose better performance





3DMark Wild Life Extreme





Asus Zenbook Pro 16X OLED





Note:


Longer bars expose better performance





System Configurations
































Dell XPS 17 9720

Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.3GHz Intel Core i7-12700H; 32GB DDR5 4,800MHz RAM; 6GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 graphics; 1TB SSD




MacBook Pro 16

Apple MacOS Monterey 12.4; Apple M1 Max 10-core chip; 64GB RAM; Apple 32-core GPU; 2TB SSD




Asus Zenbook Pro 16X OLED

Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.3GHz Intel Core i7-12700H; 16GB DDR5 RAM; 6GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 graphics; 1TB SSD




HP Spectre x360 16

Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 3.4GHz Intel Core i7-11390H; 16GB DDR4 3,200MHz RAM; 4GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050 graphics; 1TB SSD




Dell Inspiron 16 Plus

Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.3GHz Intel Core i7-11800H; 16GB DDR4 3,200MHz RAM; 4GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050 graphics; 512GB SSD










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Apple has no more love for the 17-inch laptop.

Screenshot by Joshua Goldman



More than nine ages after Apple created the first one, Apple's unceremoniously contained its 17-inch laptop from its lineup, announcing just 13- and 15-inch MacBook Pros and the new MacBook Pro with Retina Display at WWDC 2012.


And it's probable that no one will ever miss it.


Apple was the obliging manufacturer to add a 17-inch laptop to its lineup in 2003 -- the largest cover available from any vendor at the time -- and has had one ever exact. But with the new wide-screen, ultrahigh-resolution Retina Display, those improbable couple inches might be irrelevant.


After all, mobility is key now, not cover size. It used to be you needed a larger laptop to get performance good enough to replace a desktop, but that's no longer the case. (I mean, look at Apple's tag line ended the new models.)


A 15-inch screen is plenty for most purposes when you're traveling, and when you're not, you can connect into an external note. And really, look at how much people can get done on the 9.7-inch iPad cover and 3.5-inch iPhone screen.


What do you think? Is there mild a need for a 17-inch MacBook? Do you think it'll make a in backward when Apple can offer a more affordable 17-inch Retina version?