Everything you missed on Day One of CES 2025

CES 2025 has begun, which means a whole fleet of new gadgets has been unleashed onto the world. As usual, team Engadget has battled jet lag, sleep deprivation and the static shocks of those horrible casino carpets to bring you all the news that’s fit to print.

But if you’re too busy to keep your browser locked on the site (or our handy dandy liveblog) then here’s a recap. This may not be everything we covered, but it’s a rundown of the biggest, most important and generally interesting news for your delectation. 

There was a strong showing from the biggest names in the PC space, with Intel showing off its latest crop of Arrow Lake chips. These are AI and gaming-friendly slices of silicon that should pop up in PCs and laptops from major manufacturers in the next three months.

Speaking of which, Dell turned up to the show to announce it was killing off the bulk of its brands in favor of copying Apple’s naming strategy. Rather than XPS, Inspiron and Latitude, you’ll have Dell, Dell Pro and Dell Max — which in Sam and Devindra’s minds, is a massive unforced error.

On AMD’s side of the chip war, it announced the new Ryzen Z2, which will power the next crop of gaming handhelds. The rumor mill was suggesting the Z2 would sit at the heart of Valve’s next Steam Deck, which Valve moved quickly to kibosh.

But on the subject of handhelds, Acer wanted to show off its supersized Steam Deck rival, the Nitro Blaze 11. As the name implies, it’s packing an 11-inch display, kickstand and detachable controllers, like a Switch that got out of its cage and found your secret stash of human growth hormone.  

Samsung rocked up at the show to flaunt the Galaxy Book5 Pro with Intel’s new Arrow Lake chips. But its real focus was on its new range of home entertainment gear, including its new soundbars and 8K Neo QLED screens, which is also what you’ll find inside its new Frame Pro TVs.

CES isn’t a mobile-friendly show, but Samsung did announce that its first Unpacked keynote of 2025 will drop on January 22. But, psh, whatever: The real Samsung mobile device news we are about is that its ball-shaped robot, Ballie, will go on sale later this year.

On the subject of things scuttling around your floors, plenty of companies are trying to find a way to make their robovacs stand out. Dreame’s X50 can avoid getting stuck on tricky door thresholds since it can vault obstacles as tall as… 6cm, via its “ProLeap System.” Given most robovacs can run aground on a threshold between one room and another, it’s a useful feature.

Roborock’s Saros Z70, meanwhile, has a little robotic arm in its lid that can pick up and move small objects found in its way. As a parent whose kids have some sort of obsession with leaving their socks in obtuse places, I already want one.

Speaking of things I want, despite my longstanding hatred of AI, I’m quite partial to the idea of Halliday’s AI Glasses. They’re designed to help you navigate life, proactively answering your questions, helping you remember key information and generally giving your tired brain a rest.

Yukai Engineering is also looking to tend to your tired brain, with its Mirumi robot designed to make you smile. The theory being if you’re feeling low, it’ll stare at you until you have a brief moment of bemused joy that’ll kick you out of your funk.

It wouldn’t be CES without an appearance by will.i.am, who LG recently appointed as its new Chief Being will.i.am Officer. The company was showing off its new TVs and soundbars, as well as its new will.i.am-infused xboom speakers with built-in boom, boom and pow.

Moving onto the bodily fluids part of our presentation: two different companies turned up to Las Vegas with saliva-testing gadgets asking consumers to spit on that thing to monitor their stress. cortiSense and Hormometer are two products that’ll monitor the cortisol (the “stress hormone”) levels in your saliva.

Day one rounded out with press conferences from a couple of heavy hitters: Sony and NVIDIA. Sony showed off very little in the way of consumer electronics, instead giving us a (eye-wateringly expensive) price for the car it’s making with Honda and then talking about broadcast stuff for an hour. Hey, at least we have a date for The Last of Us season two. As for NVIDIA, CEO Jensen Huang talked about AI for 30 minutes, then announced some (eye-wateringly expensive) new GPUs, then talked for AI for about 30 minutes. Thrilling stuff! 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/everything-you-missed-on-day-one-of-ces-2025-050018086.html?src=rss 

Engadget Podcast: We’ve survived two days of CES 2025

In this bonus episode, Cherlynn and Devindra discuss the latest innovations in robot vacuums, new AI PC hardware from AMD and Intel, and Dell’s decision to nuke its PC brands in favor of Apple-esque “Dell Pro” and “Dell Pro Max” branding. (Note: We recorded this episode before NVIDIA announced its new RTX 5000 GPUs, but we’ll have more to say on that soon!)

Listen below or subscribe on your podcast app of choice. If you’ve got suggestions or topics you’d like covered on the show, be sure to email us or drop a note in the comments! And be sure to check out our other podcast, Engadget News!

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Credits 

Hosts: Devindra Hardawar and Cherlynn Low
Music: Dale North

Transcript

Devindra: [00:00:00] What’s up everyone, this is Devindra Hardwar, Senior Editor at Engadget.

Cherlynn: I’m Deputy Editor Cherlynn Low.

Devindra: We are here what is this, the beginning of night one of CES officially?

Cherlynn: I guess, yeah. I

Devindra: guess we have already suffered through basically day minus one. Minus

Cherlynn: one and today’s zero.

Devindra: One thing I want our listeners to understand is that we have already seen a lot of things we kind of know where the CES is headed. And, I think this is a cursed show Cherlynn. How do you feel about that? For all of us. For our

Cherlynn: team. Yeah, I think I mean, Devindra, I’ll let you speak to your situation, but we’ve had team members who have fallen deathly ill.

We have also, like, people who have completely had to miss their flights, international flights. It’s been quite Engadget team, but we have a really, really good team of people. Everyone’s got great attitudes and, like, our spirits are high. Okay. You want to just get the stuff going. So, yeah, no, and Devindra, you have been struggling a little [00:01:00] bit.

Devindra: So, yeah, update here is I basically threw my back out the the day before I had to fly. So, I kind of was mentally just preparing how to fly without caring much and just being really easy on my back. But, you know, I survived. And

Cherlynn: sitting in a plane for as long as you did couldn’t help either, right?

Probably didn’t help.

Devindra: Thankfully I did a smart thing and I bought a Comfort Plus upgrade with my points ahead of time. And I was like, I was going to be chill on the flight and it turned out that was just necessary. Yeah, so CS is officially beginning. We have seen we’ve just went through CS Unveiled yesterday.

A lot of embargoes and news came out today too. You know, some of the biggest news we’ve seen. Dell’s rebrand away from its own PC names. To Dell, Dell Pro, Dell Pro Max. There’s some new hardware from Intel and AMD. Yay! that they showed off and, you know, just kind of a typical CS stuff. What were the weird things you saw, Cherlynn, at at Unveiled?

Because you were there amidst all the weird gadgets.

Cherlynn: Yeah, and to be clear, given Devindra’s [00:02:00] injury, we are, we are having Devindra stay in place where he is, you know, able to recover a little bit. So, Devindra wasn’t at Unveiled with me, so I’m going to tell you about all these funny things we saw at Unveiled.

Somehow the most intriguing thing so far is the trend of Putting things in your mouth at CES Unveiled.

Speaker 3: Okay.

Cherlynn: So, we have like, at least two things that are saliva detecting devices. Uh huh, huh. Or like, you put a drop of saliva or you put your like, a stick in your mouth or something. We

Devindra: are not going to call this the Hawktwa CES, let’s not do that.

Dan

Cherlynn: Cooper definitely not coming up with a story based around that. But the idea is that using your saliva. Companies can tell how much cortisol or other types like progesterone types of things, hormones are inside your Or in you, right? And so it’s a bit to help with burnout a bit to help with like stress and health and then there is It’s the salt spoon that everyone was licking at CES on day one.

That

Devindra: doesn’t seem like a good [00:03:00] idea at a, at a conference. It

Cherlynn: was so, yeah, everyone’s felt like it was, initially it seemed a little icky, but the booth was so crowded I went over and it turns out they actually had like individual disposable versions of this spoon, the salt spoon per its name. It’s a gadget that will mimic or simulate the, the flavor of umami or salt made by a company called Kirin.

Devindra: Okay.

Cherlynn: Which I believe makes some kind of condiment. That’s the,

Devindra: they’re a soy sauce company. Exactly.

Cherlynn: And so, it’s the idea that like, people want to live healthier, eat better, and not have such a high sodium diet. So, but they still crave this taste. We love it. We

Devindra: love umami. Exactly. Why don’t

Cherlynn: we, why don’t we use electric on your tongue?

Devindra: That is some dystopian, I hope the story about this is how it’s made. That is very dystopian. That’s very like, you know, Soylent Green or something where we’re not really eating food, but we’re feeling these sort of like electrical impulses of food.

Cherlynn: Triggering your tongue to feel like it’s tasting something.

Just to feel alive. That’s horrible. I know. I, it’s, it’s, you asked me weird. And I was like, yeah, that [00:04:00] is pretty horrifying. But I’m very intrigued. I almost, so I was kind of waiting in line, but it was so crowded always. And I had so much other stuff to check out that, I didn’t really get around to it.

There were other things, I think, that turned up that, as unveiled, that were very interesting. Our team saw a stringless guitar. There were, like, about a zillion robots that all kind of look very weird. And then, lots of mirrors that you can, like, stand in front of and scan yourself. And, finally, I think, the Stern Pinball Machine of the Year is themed Dungeons Dragons.

Okay.

Devindra: Really, just really hitting the nerd market perfectly. We did see Roborock’s flagship new robot vacuum and that thing looks cool because they just added an arm to it. Like it has an extendable arm that can pick up socks and small things from the floor. And I am really interested in seeing the race between Roomba all these other companies.

I think was one of the first to do like, okay, self cleaning. We’re going to dump your vacuum into this bigger container than the vacuum [00:05:00] can keep going. Now everybody’s doing that. Then Roomba and others people started doing like combo mops. And now it’s just like, we’re getting appendages. We’re getting, I think one can climb stairs.

I saw news about that.

Cherlynn: So Carissa is on the robot vacuum for us, I guess. And she got a chance to check out the, yeah, the Roborock I can’t remember the actual. name, how it’s pronounced, Safi or Safu Z70 and it we have a video on the article on our website as well as on our Twitter. It’s

Devindra: the Saros Z70, yeah.

Cherlynn: So close, that was so close. And yeah, that video shows the robot’s arm kind of coming out of its round disc like body and then picking up a sock that was in front of it. And not only that, I thought it would just pick it up and then like, wipe and then move away and put it back down. No, it took it to a basket nearby, like a laundry basket almost, And placed it in there.

So basically

Devindra: we’re almost there. We’re almost there to real robot helpers.

Cherlynn: So close. This thing is very close. Who knew Roborock of all companies would do it. I was like,

Devindra: it’s a, it’s really interesting to watch because Roborock, I think, yeah, it’s a [00:06:00] Chinese company and these folks, like, especially when they’re doing robotic stuff, like they’re just barreling forward because they can invest more in R& D and stuff.

I want, I’ve said this before. I want something that can like unload my dishwasher,

Cherlynn: which is the

Devindra: process that I think like

Cherlynn: my dishwashing unloading therapy.

Devindra: You know load it up clean the kitchen just like a real rosy robot situation. That’s what I need

Cherlynn: I mean the other robot vacuum that you’re talking about that can climb upstairs.

I believe is the dreamy And yeah, it’s interesting to see or I was like why why would we need a robot vacuum that can climb upstairs? But I guess there are actual functional uses for the x50 robot I don’t know, man. 1, 700 just for it to, like, climb.

Devindra: I think this is a bad idea. This is a bad idea, because Generally, you want your robot to be on one floor.

Yeah! Once you have stairs in the equation, then, like, it could fall. There could be all sorts of issues. To me, that’s not super useful. I’ve been room building for a while, and only recently with two floors. You pick it up, and you move it to another floor when you need to. If you’re super [00:07:00] bougie, you have more than one Roomba.

You have a Roomba port per floor. Or you have

Cherlynn: the cheap one on the floor that doesn’t matter as much as the expensive one in the place that matters. And they’re

Devindra: cheap Roombas. You could get a refurb Roomba for like 200, 300 bucks.

Cherlynn: Yeah.

Devindra: Relatively, that’s relatively cheap compared to how much they used to cost.

Cherlynn: Well, this one, I mean, I guess the, the shtick with this dreamy robot is that it climbs up like a human. So it’s not like sort of propelling itself up in some strange way, going up on an incline, getting his rollers. It’s like, God, some kind of like climbing mechanic. That’s like. Bipedal? Is it bipedal? Is it like

Devindra: I have to take a closer look.

The

Cherlynn: video looks like wild and I’m in such a CES fever dream that like, I have forgotten what it looks like. So much

Devindra: stuff. Another thing I want to talk about, the TVs seem like, it seems like wireless TVs are morbid thing right now. Like LG and Samsung are fully doing it. All their flagships have wireless boxes.

They say the lag is pretty good for gaming. I would have to, I would have to see that to see how much it works. But I do think that’s a good pain point for a lot of [00:08:00] people. People hate Wires. Moving behind their TVs. They hate, like, if you’re mounting a TV, you have to, like, figure out where all the wires are going to go.

So there’s that that company Displace, which last year had the suction TV with the battery, which I think I called it vaporware last year. I don’t think they actually shipped any. This year they’re back. They have a soundbar. They say they’re going to actually ship stuff. I don’t believe it. But, they’re back.

They’re here.

Cherlynn: Is one year enough time to see if the TV that will stick itself to your wall has fallen off yet? You know what I mean? Like, is it time to call it safe if it hasn’t fallen off in a year? Or should we give it another year? I don’t know.

Devindra: It’s my whole thing about trusting gadgets and trusting devices, I will not trust it.

Multi thousand dollar device that is just hanging by my wall by suction cup.

Cherlynn: It’s like one thing if it falls off and hurts itself, it’s another if it like takes down my wall with it, right? Like, and my bed and my glass table or something. So yeah, there’s a lot of stuff to be concerned about, I think.

Devindra: Boy AIPC is still a running theme this year.

AMD was really big on a whole bunch of [00:09:00] new chips. They announced the Ryzen AI Max chip, which they say is going to be in Halo products, Halo Copilot Plus PCs. It’s supposed to be really powerful. It has more graphics than their other ones. They also say it does better rendering, like 3D rendering, better than Intel’s chips.

Because AMD’s graphics tend to be better. They have like built in Radeon cores. So, you know, they’re kind of killing it. Intel was just like, hey We have AI chips too. They’re coming to gaming desktops. They’re coming to other things.

Speaker 3: Yeah,

Devindra: they have core PC, core AI laptop chips that will be coming to gaming laptops as well.

So, that’s a thing. You know, the good thing about CES is that you can see people and talk to people. So, I had a good chat with Pavan Davaluri, who is like the head of Windows and Surface devices from Microsoft. That was an off the record chat, but I can say it was good to have. That conversation to see what they’re thinking about AI PCs.

Hopefully we’ll have him on for another section of the gadget podcast, [00:10:00] but I guess like CS is happening. Like when news is happening, these companies are taking it seriously. We’re talking to high level people. So it feels like a CS of your, I’d say, despite being so cursed early on,

Speaker 3: I guess,

Devindra: yeah, like stuff, it feels legitimate and real in a way that hasn’t for the past couple of years.

But I mean, for

Cherlynn: you, maybe two part of it is the return to the physical. Yes. Right, because it’s been a while. And I think that my general sense is that interest in CES might have waned. I think this year too you know, we’ve, we’ve had different observations about shows from the recent years and this year feels even more like it is something you could, it’s like commoditizing things for the sake of commoditizing things a little bit and more than ever actually.

And it’s very much like the Radio Shack show a little bit. But you know, I would say, I don’t want to give away what we’re working on. So I would say like, we’re, Come to Engadget. com come to our social media channels where we’ve got a lot of videos going up We’ve actually are bringing back our youtube channel for a little bit And the live blog we I am in [00:11:00] live blog hell every day for a little bit but it is a fun time because live blogs allow me to be a bit more I think personal with our audience Which is fun like this podcast But I do want to shout out like to your point like amd and intel Both have made their announcements as of the time.

We’re recording this but We still don’t know technically what NVIDIA is going to announce. And Nvidia has one of the, I wanna say the most hyped keynotes or speeches, this CES mm-hmm . What are you thinking that they’ll do for CES?

Devindra: I mean, for the keynote, they typically hype up their AI projects or robotics projects.

And honestly, things that we don’t typically report news on because it’s kind of pie in the sky stuff that will only exist for a car manufacturers or something. They don’t really touch consumers. We will eventually hear, most likely, about the new GeForce RTX GPUs. Maybe not tonight, but I have a good sense like sometime this week, NVIDIA will make that announcement.

And that is the thing people are really waiting to see. And I think AMD sensed that a bit too. They briefly teased some information about the RDNA 4 [00:12:00] GPUs. Yeah, AMD also teased their RX 9070 GPUs. And that’s interesting too, just the name is interesting. Because you know, AMD’s used to follow a fully different Radeon naming scheme.

Now they’re kind of aligning with what NVIDIA’s doing. So, this Radeon RX 9070 will be comparable to whatever NVIDIA announces as a 5070 video card. Okay. So, it should make shopping a little easier. So there’s that. The RDNA 4 technology is going to have AI upscaling, which is a thing we’ve knocked AMD against before.

Because their fidelity affects a super resolution for stuff. But just couldn’t compete with NVIDIA NVIDIA’s DLSS, so they’re gonna have an answer to that. But again, just like, brief teases the news post I wrote is like the bare minimum we can even write because they didn’t have much information.

They’re just like, yeah, we will have new video cards, we will have new

Cherlynn: graphics. Is it claiming a spot,

Devindra: right? Like, kinda? Yeah. Basically. Whereas I think NVIDIA’s gonna come here and show off new hardware, new actual things, so. We shall see.

Cherlynn: Yeah.

Devindra: And I want to do maybe one or two [00:13:00] more of these episodes, just like recapping where we are Oh, throughout the show?

Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, we are using the DJI mic 2, or mic mini, so we can like sit down and record anywhere. Yep. We’re at our breakfast nook right now. In

Cherlynn: the hotel.

Devindra: Yeah. And maybe you’ll hear more ambient noise than normal, but it, this is a really good way to have conversations. Yeah, it’s fast. We hope to have some interviews from folks up soon too.

With other

Cherlynn: members of the team. You’ll hear more than just the two of us. I think, I promise you they all sound amazing and lovely. I’m trying to think of like, whether there’s anything else that’s of note in the news that we’ve seen so far, because to your point, right, CES is in full swing, really. And we’ve been

Devindra: like, headstabbed.

Just like, so much stuff. Sherilyn’s been managing so much of the like, practical stuff and the scheduling stuff. Yeah, I’ve had like a pile of embargoes. All of us, like, all the team

Cherlynn: has had piles of embargoes, which is like, it is, like, to your point, kind of a return to form in that sense, but also feels like we’ve been covering this endlessly every CES.

We saw a few I don’t know. Lots of AI that [00:14:00] doesn’t really need to be AI. We saw a lot of pet tech. We saw a lot of smart home. Man, send us your thoughts, really, so far as we are chugging along the show. Podcast at Engadget. com would be a great place to drop them. Oh my gosh LG’s got all these weird products that I think we talked about even ahead of coming to CES.

Where like, yes it’s slapdick 2070 inch screen on a microwave, but then recently we found out what, it was a projector that looks like a stand fan or something? That’s actually

Devindra: kind of cool. Yeah, we gotta get some video of that stuff.

Cherlynn: Yeah, so plenty, plenty to look out

Devindra: for. Of the stories we’ve produced, I do want to shout out the stuff Sam and I did around Dell’s rebranding.

I wrote about Dell rebranding all of its PCs to sound more like Apple, so check out that post. But Sam had a really good rant called Dell killing the XPS name is an unforced error. And that whole story is wild because Dell’s basically obliterating all of its brand names. They’re just going to be Dell, Dell Pro and Dell Pro Max.

And to both of us, that sounds very Apple y. Wait, can I insert

Cherlynn: myself a little bit here? Because it’s not just Dell, Dell Pro, Dell Pro Max. [00:15:00] After I read both of your posts, it is the sub tiers that makes no sense. Like if they simplified it truly, it would just be Dell, Dell Pro, Dell Pro Max. Fine. But no, it would be Dell, Dell Pro, and then under each, there might be the premium label and the plus label.

So it could be the Dell Pro Plus. Yep. But versus the Dell non pro premium. So the Dell premium is still worse than the Dell Pro Plus?

Devindra: Yes.

Cherlynn: My goodness. What? And then you throw in the numbers. There’s numbers. They’re coming back. Some of the numbers

Devindra: are coming back. The desktops are kind of ridiculous because at the event Sam and I were at, they showed off The Dell Pro Max Micro and the Dell Pro Max Mini, which you have the same name within your name.

You are conflicting what this device actually is, and I find that to be completely ridiculous. So, check out Sam and my rant about that thing. I also did a video up on YouTube, and for once, the YouTube commentators seem to be on our side. Yes, they’re right.

Cherlynn: They are right. We are right, and Dell [00:16:00] is not right.

And so I am glad you pointed it out. It seemed like a lot of people resonated with that story on our side as well. It’s a whole

Devindra: thing. And I will say I don’t miss like the, I don’t miss a lot of the brands like Inspiron and whatever, but it’s more like XPS. Getting rid of XPS seems like a mistake. Falling in the footsteps of Apple seems like a really weak move.

Cherlynn: Of all the things to do because look, I covered HP’s pivot to one brand as well when that happened last year. And HP had a good sense to just, when they say simplify, they mean. Simplify to their own brand. So they did Omnibook, right? Which is not Pro Max. Fine. It’s their own name. For Dell to tell you that they’re not copying Apple, and I’m not saying they did say that to you, but like, they more or less suggested that these are industry terms.

They did say that

Speaker 3: to me. But

Cherlynn: like, if HP can do so without invoking the terms Pro and Max, why can’t you, Dell?

Devindra: That’s basically what I asked Michael Dell, the CEO of Dell, at this event where Dell. com. He was there to announce this whole thing and they were asking [00:17:00] questions from the audience. So yeah, I shot my hand up and I was like, my direct question to him was, what does Dell have to gain by copying Apple?

And Michael Dell did not look too pleased.

Cherlynn: Of course he did. He

Devindra: I mean for him too, it’s like, oh, now my names are all Dell, Dell, Dell. So it’s like better for him and his ego. Yeah, yeah, his

Cherlynn: name, yeah, yeah. And I

Devindra: feel like that may be part of it, but I’ve talked to a lot of people at Dell, like Other people, people working within the PC design stuff and nobody was excited about this change.

Of course

Speaker 3: not, why? Because

Devindra: their babies are all gone. Like the people who work on Inspiron and Precision and everything, the brands they devote their lives to are gone. And now they have to live with these new brands and I don’t know if people are going to be as excited. So anyway, that’s going to be a long ongoing story.

Check out our coverage in all of its many forms. I think that’s going to be one of the big takeaways from the CS. Del sort of, just shooting itself in the foot here. And nobody seems to like it except Del, except Michael Del.

Cherlynn: Yeah. I want to quickly shout out that the Samsung press conference just wrapped and we learned two things of note.

One, that the [00:18:00] Bali rolling robot is going to actually retail this year, they say. But they did say that last year too. And then we don’t know a price yet. We just know it’s going to be the first half of the year is what they said on stage. And then the second thing is they announced the dates of Galaxy Unpacked.

It will happen? January 22nd. So thanks a lot, Samsung, because right after CES, some of us will be heading straight into preparation for Samsung Galaxy S8. Let

Devindra: Cherlynn take a break. That’s the message of this year. Never,

Cherlynn: never happening. Alright, we

Devindra: will, we’ll be back with more updates about CES. Drop us an email, folks, podcastinggadget.

com. No live stream this week, because we are here, but you’ll get a bunch of episodes from us. And check out our social channels, too. A lot of fun videos are going up. Send us

Cherlynn: music recommendations! Oh

Devindra: yeah, maybe we should just open up a playlist and have people add songs to it. Anyway, we’re out folks, thank you.

Cherlynn: Bye!

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/engadget-podcast-weve-survived-two-days-of-ces-2025-052543789.html?src=rss 

MSI made a CPU cooler with a tiny built-in turntable and it’s pure fun

One of the things I love the most about CES is finding all the silly one-offs and concept products that might never see full production. At CES 2025, MSI made something truly joyful when it created a custom CPU cooler that features a built-in turntable.

The water block’s official name is the Mag Coreliquid A13 concept, though a name doesn’t really matter because MSI says it doesn’t have plans to turn it into an actual retail device. That’s kind of a bummer since not only does it mean you won’t be able to put a fun little spinning table inside your desktop, it also sucks because the cooler that the A13 is based on — the Mag Coreliquid A15 360 — is a real product that has some neat specs. It features an offset CPU mount that can improve the performance of recent Intel chips (like the Core Ultra 200S) that have hotspots in unusual positions.

MSI made a concept CPU water block for CES 2025 that has a built-in turntable and it’s kind of awesome.

Sadly, there are no plans to put it into actual production.

Also, the Lucky the dragon figure does not come included.@engadget pic.twitter.com/X70XJeAq8I

— Sam Rutherford (@samrutherford) January 7, 2025

Now I fully admit that the fun of having a spinning table inside your PC might be lost on a lot of people. But then again, just look at Lucky (that’s the name of MSI’s dragon mascot) twirling in place while the desktop churns along. And what’s better is that you can raise the clear lid on the water block and put anything you want inside. Think about a fancy watch or maybe a disco ball. Wouldn’t that be a hoot, especially with all those RGB lights nearby? Honestly, the whole setup is kind of mesmerizing.

Photo by Sam Rutherford/Engadget

But alas, the Mag Coreliquid A13 will never be yours. That is unless people make enough noise and keep bugging MSI until they make it for real. The power is in your hands.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/pc/msi-made-a-cpu-cooler-with-a-tiny-built-in-turntable-and-its-pure-fun-063636564.html?src=rss 

Razer’s new Blade 16 laptop is its thinnest model yet

CES 2025 has officially begun and it has brought new products from Samsung, LG and, now, Razer. We have a first look at Razer’s next generation Blade 16, a model the company claims is its “thinest Razer gaming laptop ever.” The news comes one year after Razer announced its predecessor at CES 2024

So, how thin is thin? According to Razer, the newest Blade 16 is up to 32 percent slimmer than the 2024 model at 0.59 inches thick. We’ll have to see how this reduced space impacts its battery life. 

The Blade 16’s keyboard has also undergone a change, with 50 percent more travel at 1.5mm. Plus, the 16-inch screen has a QHD+ 240Hz OLED display that can respond in 0.2ms. Razer has also given the Blade 16 AMD Ryzen AI processors for the first time to support any AI-powered applications. The Blade 16 doesn’t have a price yet but, given its predecessor starts at $2,700, it’s unlikely to be cheap.  

Razer also used CES to announce an “AI esports coach” called Project Ava. It provides real-time support that draws from the slightly vague “community wisdom and knowledge bases.” Gamers will be able to access it during breaks, in their headset while playing or in a chat box. It should be available in an upcoming beta version.  

Plus, Razer rolled out a range of new gaming accessories, including the Monitor Stand Chroma for $200. It can hold up to 44 pounds, has a 4-port USB-C hub and supports 16.8 million colors for custom lighting — all great features but still $200 for essentially a stand. There’s also the Iskur V2 X, which has similar features to the Iskur V2 but with a larger seat base (over 21 inches) and a much more accessible price, $300 compared to $650. Speaking of chairs, Razer announced Project Arielle, a concept chair that offers heating and cooling systems. 

We’re reporting live from CES 2025 in Las Vegas from January 5-10. Read our CES 2025 preview, and take a look back at our picks for Best of CES 2024.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/laptops/razers-new-blade-16-laptop-is-its-thinnest-model-yet-140032671.html?src=rss 

Alienware’s new OLED gaming monitor boasts ‘world’s highest’ pixels per inch

Alienware has just announced the Alienware 27 4K QD-OLED Gaming Monitor at CES 2025. According to the company, the monitor has the highest pixel density for an OLED or QD-OLED (more on this in a minute) monitor at 166 pixels per inch (PPI). But that’s not all it offers.

The monitor has Dolby Vision HDR and VESA DisplayHDR True Black 400 certification for even better image quality. The 0.03ms response time is perfect for competitive gamers who value extreme speed, and the 240Hz refresh rate is nothing to sneeze at either. Finally, it comes with an AI algorithm (because in 2025, of course it does) that’s supposed to protect against burn-in.

The Alienware 27 4K QD-OLED Gaming Monitor will be available in North America in March, and other regions one month later. It will retail for $900.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/accessories/alienwares-new-oled-gaming-monitor-boasts-worlds-highest-pixels-per-inch-040010053.html?src=rss 

Acer’s latest Predator gaming laptops include RTX 50-series GPUs

Acer just announced a trio of new Predator gaming laptops at CES 2025 that are packed with high-end specs. They arrive with different price points and feature sets, but all of them include NVIDIA RTX-50 series GPUs.

The baddest of the bunch is the Predator Helios 18 AI. As indicated by the name, this laptop features an impressive 18-inch 4K Mini LED display. The refresh rate can typically go up to 120Hz, but a new dual-mode display feature lets users switch to FHD resolution at 240Hz. The brightness metrics are decent, at up to 1000 nits.

Acer

The Helios 18 AI is available with up to an Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX processor and up to the NVIDIA GeForce 5090 GPU. It also includes a dedicated NPU for AI tasks, which allows for “premium graphical gaming and AI experiences.” To the latter point, this laptop ships with more than 150 optimized AI apps, including many popular LLMs and image generators.

Users can soup this beast up with up to 192GB of RAM and up to 6TB of PCIe storage. The cooling tools have also been improved, as the laptop feature’s Acer’s proprietary 6th-gen AeroBlade metal fans, which boost airflow by around 20 percent when compared to plastic fans. Purchasers also get Acer’s swappable MagKey 4.0 keyboard. The Predator Helios 18 AI will be available in the US in May, with a starting price of $3,000.

The Helios 16 AI is pretty much the same laptop as the 18 AI, with an identical cooling system, MagKey 4.0 keyboard and the same available CPU and GPU options. The display is smaller, at 16-inches, and this one is an OLED panel with a refresh rate up to 240Hz. The memory takes a hit here, with configuration options up to 64GB of RAM. Storage caps out at 4TB. The Predator Helios 16 AI will be available in the US in June, with a starting price of $2,300.

Acer

The Predator Helios Neo 16S AI is the most budget-friendly of the bunch, while still retaining high-end features. This is a slim laptop, at just 19.9mm. It also supports CPU options up to the Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX with an integrated NPU and includes the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti GPU. It can be outfitted with up to 32GB of RAM and 2TB of storage.

The laptop comes with a 16-inch OLED WQXGA screen with up to a 240Hz refresh rate, a 100 percent DCI-P3 color gamut and integration with NVIDIA G-Sync. The price is where this computer really shines. It starts at just $1,700, with availability beginning in April.

Acer

In addition to the trio of laptops, Acer unveiled the Predator XB323QX gaming monitor. This 31.5-inch 5K IPS display boasts a 144Hz refresh rate and a 0.5ms response time. It supports NVIDIA G-Sync Pulsar, with 10-bit color depth and a 95 percent DCI-P3 color gamut. On the back, there’s a DisplayPort 1.4 and a pair of HDMI 2.1 ports. It features adjustable tilt, swivel and height and comes with an integrated two-watt speaker system. There’s no pricing or availability information on this one yet.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/pc/acers-latest-predator-gaming-laptops-include-rtx-50-series-gpus-040018258.html?src=rss 

Alienware resurrects its Area-51 desktop PC

The Alienware Area-51 desktop PC, a line of high-end gaming rigs dating back to 1998, has returned after several years out of the game. The company announced the new model at CES 2025, describing the resurrected Area-51 as “retaking the throne” as Alienware’s latest flagship gaming PC. But royalty doesn’t come cheap, as its launch configuration will cost around $4,500. (Cue spit take.)

The new Area-51 PC has a full-sized 80L tower with headroom for over 600W of dedicated graphics power and 280W for processing. It supports the latest NVIDIA graphics cards and an Intel Core Ultra 9 285K CPU.

The rig uses a positive-pressure system with only intake fans; exhaust comes exclusively from passive airflow. That setup includes dual 140mm fans that blow air upward to the GPU, dual 180mm fans aimed laterally from the front toward the GPU, CPU and RAM and dual or triple 120mm fans pulling air in from the top for liquid cooling configurations. The greater internal pressure passively forces heated air out of the back.

Alienware says the new airflow system (in a build using the GeForce RTX 4090 and an Intel Core i9K processor) moves 25 percent more air, runs 13 percent cooler and is 45 percent quieter than the two previous Alienware Aurora desktops. The company says that leads to 50 percent more processing power.

Alienware

You can open its chassis by unlocking a knob on the back of the tower. Alienware says there’s plenty of room to fit your hands and move upgrade parts in and out. Inside are QR codes linking to instructional videos, which likely do little more than save you a few seconds of searching YouTube. The collection includes guides on swapping out the RAM, GPU, SSD, and power supply, as well as maintenance issues like cleaning its fans and three removable / cleanable filters.

The Area-51 rig supports up to 64GB DDR5 XMP (2x 32GB) RAM at 6400 MT/s, 8TB of storage, and liquid cooling in 240mm and 360mm configurations (with a DIY upgrade path to 420mm). Configurations use a 1500W Platinum Rated ATX12VO or an 850W Gold Rated ATX12VO power supply.

Shaun Lucas / Alienware

The launch configuration, including a “next-gen NVIDIA GPU,” will cost around $4,500 when it arrives later in Q1 2025. Other builds will follow later, including a (unspecified) cheaper entry-level option.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/pc/alienware-resurrects-its-area-51-desktop-pc-040024043.html?src=rss 

The HP Omen Max 16 is its most powerful gaming laptop yet

HP only has one all-new laptop in its Omen gaming line to show off at CES 2025, but it looks like a doozy because the company claims it’s the most powerful 16-inch notebook it has ever made.

The Omen Max 16 looks like HP took a standard Omen 16 (which is retaining the same design but getting refreshed with new components for 2025) and then crammed in as many high-end components as it could. This includes support for CPUs from both Intel and AMD with up to a Core Ultra 9 275HX or Ryzen AI 9 HX 375 along with a range of NVIDIA RTX 5000-series GPUs.

Photo by Sam Rutherford/Engadget

But the blazing specs don’t stop there, because the Max 16 can also be equipped with up to 64GB of DDR5 RAM (at 5,600 MT/s), PCIe Gen 5 SSDs and either OLED or IPS displays with 240Hz refresh rates. So there shouldn’t be many questions about this thing delivering a ton of speed. Connectivity also looks solid with two Thunderbolt 4 ports (with support for USB power delivery), two USB-A jacks, Ethernet, 3.5mm audio and HDMI 2.1.

But the features I like the most are some of the smaller touches HP added, like a new vapor chamber — the first ever on any Omen gaming laptop. Thanks to a new liquid Cryo compound, the Max 16 should have much improved thermal management, while the addition of reversible fans are designed to keep the inside of the laptop clean. HP’s thought process is that by occasionally spinning its fans backwards, the machine can blow out any dust stuck inside. This might not sound like a big deal, but let me ask, when was the last time you opened up your laptop and gave it a good cleaning? If you’re like most people, probably never.

Photo by Sam Rutherford/Engadget

Meanwhile, in case the Max 16’s RGB-lit keyboard doesn’t draw enough attention, there’s a new lightbar on the front of the system that pumps a ton of color. Alternatively, in a bit of company synergy, the laptop also has a built-in wireless receiver that allows it to connect to up to three different HyperX peripherals without the need for extra dongles or adapters. It’s not a game changer, but definitely nice if you already own a pair of late-model Cloud headphones.

Finally, in an attempt to get the most out of the Max 16’s beefy hardware, HP is adding Omen AI to its Gaming Hub app. Admittedly, shoehorning AI into everything is a bit of an overdone trend, but the idea seems solid as the company says it will use machine-learning to adjust settings in order to deliver optimal performance with the touch of a single toggle.

Photo by Sam Rutherford/Engadget

Unfortunately, due to embargo restrictions from one of HP’s hardware partners, I wasn’t allowed to game on the Omen Max 16 myself. However, the company is claiming increased framerates by 25 percent or more depending on the title. Sadly, this means I’ll have to reserve judgement on the system until I can get one in for more in-depth testing. But, at least on paper and from some of its clever new features, it feels like HP has an intriguing new flagship for anyone looking for big performance from a relatively portable gaming notebook.

HP has yet to announce official pricing for the Omen Max 16, though it is slated to go on sale sometime later this spring.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/laptops/the-hp-omen-max-16-is-its-most-powerful-gaming-laptop-yet-040025199.html?src=rss 

Alienware revived its Area-51 laptops with serious performance and far-out designs

While parent company Dell is doing a big rebrand of its entire PC portfolio, at CES 2025 Alienware is sort of returning to its roots by bringing back the classic Area-51 name back for its new flagship laptop line.

Available in 16- and 18-inch versions, the resurrected Area-51 gaming notebooks feature what Alienware is calling a brand-new industrial design. Though if you look closely, you can see some similarities to existing systems like the x14 and x16. Both models sport a striking anodized liquid teal paint job with an almost iridescent quality. Around back, the company’s Aurora lighting has been integrated into the rear of the system to create a striking gradient effect on the laptop’s thermal shelf. And as before, you still get plenty of customizable RGB lights on the inside including behind both the touchpad and keyboard.

But the Area-51 laptop’s most distinctive feature might be its bottom, where Alienware has installed a Gorilla Glass window with an integrated vent to help manage airflow while also giving you a peek at the hardware inside. The company claims that thanks to its new thermal architecture, Area-51 laptops have 35 percent better airflow while being 15 percent quieter than before. There’s also a new hinge design that’s meant to hide exterior components while still allowing for easy access and stability.

Naturally, as Alienware’s latest flagship gaming laptops, the new Area-51 notebooks should offer top-notch performance thanks to support for up to Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX CPUs, 64GB of RAM (at up to 7200 MT/s, the highest yet on any Alienware laptop), 12 TB of PCIe Gen 5 SSD storage and next-gen NVIDIA RTX 5090 GPUs. More specifically, both models can handle up to 175 watts of total graphics power with an additional 105 watts dedicated to the CPU.

Unfortunately, the devices I played around with were mostly locked down, so I wasn’t able to play games or meaningfully test their processing power. That said, as the two launch systems for a new generation of laptop design, there’s a lot to like about Alienware’s revamped Area-51 laptop line. I absolutely love the new color, which is closer to emerald than teal in my opinion. Meanwhile, having up to 280 watts of total device power means there’s no shortage of computing oomph. I even like the glass panel on the bottom, though I do wonder how much extra weight that added compared to sticking with aluminum like on the rest of the system. That’s because at 7.6 pounds for the 16-inch model or a whopping 9.8 pounds for the 18-inch version, these things definitely aren’t light.

The other concern is that with high-end launch configurations starting at $3,199 when they go on sale sometime in Q1, they’re not exactly affordable either. However, Alienware says that less expensive “entry-level” models will arrive later starting at a more reasonable price of $1,999.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/laptops/alienware-revived-its-area-51-laptops-with-serious-performance-and-far-out-designs-040038956.html?src=rss 

The MSI Titan 18 HX Dragon Edition is fierce as hell

At CES 2025, MSI is launching a huge lineup of upgraded laptops with various specs that cater to an array of budgets. But of everything, one system stood out and if you take even a quick look at it, I think you can see why.

As part of MSI’s Titan Series, not only is the Titan 18 HX the biggest and most powerful system the company makes. However, the special Dragon Edition features a ton of unique design traits that ensure it will never get lost in a crowd. On its lid is a hand-drawn close-up of a scaled monster (no AI art here) which was then acid-etched into the aluminum resulting in an incredibly detailed and textured surface. You’re literally staring into the eye of the beast.

But it doesn’t stop there because there are also Norse-inspired runes carved into its lid along with an RGB-lit logo. Meanwhile on the inside, there’s a metallic ring and a dragon sculpture embedded beneath the deck that MSI says was created using advanced 3D printing and layering techniques. And in case that isn’t enough, the touchpad also features customizable RGB lighting, because hey, it’s still a gaming laptop.

The Titan 18 HX Dragon Edition isn’t all show and no go though, as it features top-of-the-line components including next-gen Intel HX series processors, NVIDIA RTX 5090 graphics, PCIe Gen 5 SSD storage, Wi-Fi 7 and a total device power of 270 watts. MSI also included a vapor chamber to help keep thermals in check while the massive 18-inch mini LED display features VESA DisplayHDR 1000 certification and a 120Hz refresh rate. Even the keyboard has been tweaked to include low-profile mechanical Cherry MX switches to deliver a thoroughly desktop-like experience but in a package that you can still (sort of) carry around. The Titan HX Dragon Edition is also part of a bundle that includes a matching wyrm-themed mouse, desk pad and packaging.

Sadly, because of certain embargo restrictions from MSI’s partners, I wasn’t allowed to power on the Titan 18 HX to see if its performance truly matches its roaring appearance. On top of that, MSI has yet to reveal official pricing or availability, though that last part might be a big deal as this system is clearly intended only for people with the heart (and wallet) of a dragon.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/laptops/the-msi-titan-18-hx-dragon-edition-is-fierce-as-hell-040055155.html?src=rss 

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