ASUS ZenBook UX331U
ASUS ZENBOOK UX331U
The rst thing you’ll notice about the ZenBook 13 UX331U is its lid. Most ZenBooks feature a nish that quite clearly gives away their aluminum construction, but the UX331U looks like it’s topped by a sheet of glass.
However, this is actually a specially treated metal surface, the result of a
CONCLUSION
fancy-sounding process called nanoimprint lithography. But while it sounds great on paper, this nish is an absolute ngerprint magnet. Furthermore, it doesn’t seem to hold up very well under daily use either as I’ve somehow managed to scu it up a little already.
Still, the UX331U is a 13.3-inch notebook with a discrete GPU, defying conventional expectations for this class of laptops. It’s not the rst to o er this, but what makes it impressive is how thin and light it is.
The UX331U’s aluminum body weighs a mere 1.12kg and measures 13.9mm thick, which makes it one of the thinnest and lightest notebooks you can get with discrete graphics. Don’t get too excited yet though, because the GPU that’s used is a more modest NVIDIA GeForce MX150 and not a beeer GeForce GTX 1050 Ti.
That said, this does provide a decent performance boost, and it’s still a lot more powerful than your average ultrabook with integrated graphics.
The backlit keyboard is quite pleasant to type on as well. It o ers a 1.4mm travel distance, and each key o ers good feedback, for a laptop keyboard. I also required next to no time to adapt to the keyboard and was able to type at a fairly good pace right o the bat, which is more than I can say for many laptop keyboards.
The Harman/Kardoncertied stereo speakers point toward the bottom, and they’re actually surprisingly loud and clear. The high frequencies can sound a tad shrill at high volumes, but I was otherwise pretty satised.
When it comes to wired connections though, this ZenBook has a total of two USB 3.1 (Gen 1) Type-A, one USB 3.1 (Gen 1) Type-C, and a full-sized HDMI port. There’s a microSD card slot on the right as well, although I’d much preferred to have seen a proper SD card reader in its place.
One nal point to address is the notebook’s cooling. When you shove a discrete GPU into a notebook that’s this thin and compact, you’re probably worried about whether it can deal with the additional heat output. Fortunately, the UX331U does quite well in this area and there were no signs of throttling. It passed a 40-loop run of 3DMark’s Fire Strike stress test with ying colors, with peak GPU and CPU temperatures of 58°C and 55°C respectively.
An affordable and competitively specc-ed notebook for the road.