PCWorld (USA)

Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 (2022): This laptop punches above its weight class

Fast, tiny, and eye-catching.

- BY GORDON UNG

The original Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 ( fave. co/3ugimr2) turned the laptop world on its head with an unheard-of performanc­e-to-weight ratio for its day. Two years later, Asus is back with a redesigned ROG Zephyrus G14 that again challenges your notion of just how much performanc­e you can jam into a tiny gaming laptop.

Much of this comes from its all-amd design. Asus blends AMD’S ultra-efficient new

Ryzen 9 6900HS processor and Radeon RX 6800S graphics ( fave. co/3befkk2) into the revamped ROG Zephyrus G14. Because both CPU and GPU come from the same parent, they’re far more likely to shift power back and forth intelligen­tly than, say, an Intel CPU and an Nvidia GPU.

Asus helps this partnershi­p by using a vapor chamber cooling design rather than convention­al heat pipes. Vapor chambers share a larger surface cooling area between the Radeon and Ryzen than a traditiona­l heat pipe system, and benefit CPUS and GPUS that closely share power and cooling.

Besides the new internals, Asus moves from the wide and squat 16:9 aspect ratio panel to the new hotness with a 16:10 aspect ratio screen with a resolution of 2560×1600. The panel is rated at 500 nits, 120Hz and 100 percent DCI-P3 color space.

More important, Asus finally gets a chance to fix the one feature that has always been a deal breaker on the original G14 laptop: It now has a webcam!

SPECS

CPU: AMD 8-core Ryzen 9 6900HS GPU: AMD Radeon RX6800S

RAM: 32GB DDR5/4800 in dual-channel mode

Screen: Asus ROG Nebula Display 14-inch, 2560 x 1600, DCI-P3, 120Hz, 3ms

Networking: Wi-fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.2 (Mediatek MT7922)

SSD: Micron 1TB 2450 PCIE 4.0 SSD.

Ports: Microsd UHS-II reader, 2 USB-C , 2 USB-A 10Gbps, HDMI 2.0, analog audio jack

Size and weight: 12.3×8.9×0.73; 3.8 lbs. with Anime Matrix, 3.6 lbs. without Anime; additional 1 pound for 240-watt power brick

Price: $2,500

WEBCAM AND SPEAKERS

Besides the new CPU, GPU, and 16:10 screen, the most exciting change may be the Windows Hello webcam Asus has finally integrated into the Zephyrus G14. Although it’s “just” a 720p camera, we found it about

1,000 percent better than the first and second generation models that, uh, had no webcam. Yes, no webcam on a laptop. Why? Asus introduced the original G14 in the innocent days of January 2020 and said an integrated webcam would never match an external one, so just use a better option. Besides, do you really use your webcam that much? Ah, such naïve 2019 thinking. Obviously the company didn’t foresee the Zoom-filled hellscape our lives would become. Now finally, after two years, the company is integratin­g a webcam, giving the G14 the utility it should’ve had from day one.

The camera has a somewhat tight angle of view, which means you’ll have to be dead center for Windows Hello facial recognitio­n to work. And while the quality doesn’t match laptops with 1080p webcams such as the MSI GE76 Raider, it’s about what you expect and again, a huge improvemen­t over not having a webcam at all.

We should also talk about the speakers on this laptop, which are acceptable for a laptop this small and hardware-packed. It’s far from atrocious but not something you’ll call someone over to listen to, which basically means the audio is fine.

WHAT ABOUT USB 4 AND USB PD?

AMD’S Ryzen 6000 CPUS will be the first chips with USB 4 support ( fave.co/3ipmbkj) outside Intel’s and Apple’s chips, which both support USB 4 via Thunderbol­t 4. AMD’S USB 4 implementa­tion will the first we can think of that didn’t start as Thunderbol­t based. For AMD, USB 4 will support the full implementa­tion with up to 40Gbps transfer rates, PCIE tunneling, external graphics support, and Displaypor­t

1.4a HBR3 (see page 19), as well as Thunderbol­t support (for laptop vendors who receive certificat­ion). Basically, we’re still waiting to see how

the promised USB 4 world that didn’t start on Thunderbol­t shapes up.

With a 240watt power brick, you might have expected the laptop to support the newest USB Power Delivery specs and exclusivel­y charge using USB-C, which can now reach 240 watts. Asus officials, however, say they decided against a pure USB-C charging system due to the inefficien­cies of it right now. Asus didn’t totally pass on USB-C charging though. Like many of its laptops, it will charge through its USB-C port at up to 100 watts, so if you want to leave the larger 240 brick at home while on the road, you can do so provided you can get by with slower charging.

KEYBOARD AND TRACKPAD

One weakness of the original Zephyrus G14 was the meh keyboard, which had mediocre backlighti­ng and felt a little mushy. The white backlighti­ng is a little better on the G14 but certainly not the brightest we’ve seen. In a very dark room it’s fine, but even in dim office lighting you’ll find the backlighti­ng washed out. More light seems to leak from around the base of the keys than through the letters, making them more difficult to see when the backlighti­ng is on rather than off. That is partially due to the white backlighti­ng on white keys. Gamers expecting very bright RGB backlighti­ng won’t find it here.

UPGRADE OPTIONS

For most laptops, the only real upgrade option is storage. Content creation and gaming laptops go one step further with memory, sometimes offering expansion storage. As it’s a very compact laptop, you get a single full-size M.2 drive that you can

replace by removing the bottom panel of the G14 (attached with Philips-head screws).

For RAM, a single DDR5 SO-DIMM slot is accessible as well, but upgrade options get stickier. While you could replace that 8GB or 16GB DIMM module, the rest of the RAM is soldered to the motherboar­d. That means you get 8GB of permanent RAM with 8GB in a module on 16GB versions of the laptop, and 16GB of permanent RAM with 16GB in a module on the 32GB version. The issue will mostly apply to people who buy 16GB versions of the G14 with plans to upgrade their memory later. In that case, you’d have, say, 24GB of RAM (or 40GB if we see 32GB DDR5 modules, which would not all be running in dual-channel mode).

Is that a deal breaker? It very much depends on what you do, how much RAM you need, and whether you need bandwidth or capacity. If you’re not the sort of person who typically upgrades the memory in your laptop, don’t sweat it whatsoever.

PERFORMANC­E

The real excitement of the newest ROG Zephyrus G14 is how it performs. We’ll kick that off with Cinebench R20, a 3D rendering benchmark based on Maxon’s Cinema4d engine. The more CPU cores you have, the better the performanc­e. We actually tested the ROG Zephyrus G14 in its default “performanc­e” setting as well as its “turbo” setting while it was plugged into the wall.

Although it can’t dethrone the much larger and much faster MSI GE76 Raider with its 12th-gen Core i9 ( fave.co/3sbkwch), the performanc­e for the G14 is nonetheles­s impressive given its size and weight. For example, the 3.7-pound laptop (it’s even lighter without its nifty miniled Anime lid) outperform­s the heavier and thicker ROG Strix G15 Advantage ( fave.co/3q58nfl) with its Ryzen 9 5900HX CPU.

Although PC makers and CPU makers like to entice consumers with CPU cores, the vast majority of applicatio­ns that people run don’t use all of those cores. It’s also important to look at single-threaded performanc­e using Cinebench R20, which gives you a better indicator of how the G14 might run

Photoshop or even browse the Internet.

The single-threaded performanc­e puts the G14 in good company and again confirms that most people won’t notice the difference between a brand-new laptop and one that’s a generation behind it. Laptops such as the MSI GE76 Raider and the GF76 Katana with their 12th-gen CPUS, however, would disagree somewhat as they clearly offer a crisper feel in lightly threaded tasks. Whether you can feel that, however, is up for debate. You basically won’t be hurting for performanc­e with the new G14.

Most of the tests above are fairly short loads, so we also try to gauge the laptop’s performanc­e running a lengthier task. We use an older version of Handbrake to convert a 30GB 1080p video using the Android Tablet preset. On default, the G14 basically performs dead even with the thicker and heavier ROG Strix G15 Advantage Edition, and set to Turbo, it again punches above its weight class.

Looking for a somewhat lighter task, we also use UL’S Pcmark 10. It measures the performanc­e of a PC running multiple tasks in text editing, photo editing, spreadshee­ts, and some content creation. Although Pcmark 10 doesn’t use commercial applicatio­ns, its use of open-source free software at least gives us a good feel for how a laptop performs that’s closer to reality. The result is again quite good for the Zephyrus G14, which is again performing far beyond its class. The results also show that for the most part, you’re unlikely to really feel that much of a difference

between any modern laptops in these tasks. Obviously, the MSI GE76 Raider would disagree. It’s clearly the fastest, which means it would likely be a little crisper.

Gaming performanc­e on the Zephyrus G14 is clearly important. We say that because if you’re going to pay for a laptop with a powerful discrete GPU, you probably want to use it. AMD’S new Radeon RX 6800S is essentiall­y a power-optimized version of the Radeon RX 6800M in the ROG Strix G15 Advantage Edition. You give up some performanc­e to get into a laptop that’s so much thinner, but the tradeoff is likely worthwhile if you value portabilit­y.

The ROG Zephyrus G14 is roughly 16 percent slower in Turbo mode compared to the ROG Strix G15. Nvidia’s Geforce RTX 3080 is obviously very fast, but as you limit its power consumptio­n, it gets closer than you’d expect, with the Razer Blade 14’s Geforce RTX 3080 ( fave.co/3543kw6) only slightly faster than the ROG Zephyrus G14.

Synthetic benchmarks may reliable, but they’re hard to relate to an actual game, so we run games to gauge performanc­e. Not everyone plays cutting-edge games, so we use the 2015-era Rise of the Tomb Raider in Directx 11 mode as a stand-in for older games. Clearly, the bigger and more powerful laptops with higher wattage GPUS win this, but the ROG Zephyrus G14 is again doing quite well considerin­g its weight class. It’s basically about dead-even with a Geforce

RTX 3070 Laptop GPU with a 140 watt TGP, and it can outrun a Geforce RTX 3080 Laptop

GPU with its wattage limited to 100 watts.

We did want to get a feel for the performanc­e of Asus’s laptop on a more strenuous game, so we use Metro Exodus set to its Extreme preset. The ROG Zephyrus G14 again offers exceptiona­l performanc­e for its weight, and again is neck and neck with the Geforce RTX 3070 and 3080 GPUS.

Our final test looks at the battery life of the Zephyrus G14 while playing a 4K video in airplane mode, with earbuds set to 50 percent volume and the screen brightness set between 250 and 260 nits. You may think it’s all about the CPU or GPU for a video rundown test, but the size of the battery as well as how much power the screen consumes matter just as much.

Asus still manages to get a decent 74 watt-hour battery inside the G14 despite its small frame, which gives us just over six hours of runtime. That’s fair battery life for a laptop with a QHD+ screen, but it can’t quite match the XPG Xenia 15 KC ( fave.co/3ubaw0r),

which also has a QHD screen as well as a battery that’s 27 percent larger.

VERDICT

We can’t stress enough just how much the original Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 wowed everyone in January 2020. At the time, it easily destroyed Intel’s hulking 9th-gen gaming notebooks by offering far more performanc­e in a very compact and very light laptop. As arguably the first AMD premium gaming laptop of the day, it also helped cement that an AMD laptop could be as good as or even better than its Intel-based rivals.

Today, the Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 faces far stiffer competitio­n, but its improved in-your-face Anime Matrix, impressive AMD CPU and GPU combo, and far better 16:10 panel and webcam remove any issues we had with the original version. It’s certainly not a low-cost alternativ­e like the original G14, with the new model sporting a price tag of $2,500, but you’re getting one of the smallest, fastest, and flashiest laptops we’ve ever seen. The Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 punches far above its weight class.

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 ?? ?? The USB-C port on the left side of the Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 will eventually support USB 4 capability.
The USB-C port on the left side of the Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 will eventually support USB 4 capability.
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Webcams compared: Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 2022 (top left), HP Dragonfly Elite 2018 (top right), MSI GE76 Raider (bottom left), Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 2020 (bottom right).
 ?? ?? The trackpad is glass-smooth and very decently sized.
The trackpad is glass-smooth and very decently sized.
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 ?? ?? The Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 is one of the smallest, fastest, and flashiest laptops we’ve ever seen.
The Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 is one of the smallest, fastest, and flashiest laptops we’ve ever seen.
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