
"The gaming laptop has just enough of everything I want from a portable machine. It's light, pretty, and relatively powerfuland, beyond all that, it has a sleek, seamless haptic trackpad and ultrabright RGB keys. The next person to come along and tell me RGB is a worthless expense can go ahead and tell it to the Predator Triton's mini LED per-key backlit keyboard."
"Few laptops offer so much in a small package, though it may not be the perfect device for gaming. The Predator is arriving at the tail end of 2025, a time when most big laptop launches have already come and gone. What's more, it's on the expensive end of 14-inch gaming laptops with these specs, demanding $2,500 for a system that may be overshadowed in just a few months when the next slate of next-gen CPUs arrives."
"Not only that, but it arrives just short of being the perfect everything laptop. Performance isn't quite on par with that of similar clamshells of this size. Battery life won't match the all-day span you can find among recent thin devices, from Apple's M-series MacBooks to all those AMD, Intel, or Qualcomm devices that aren't running a discrete GPU under the hood."
The Predator Triton 14 AI combines a light, attractive chassis with relatively strong performance, an ultrabright mini-LED per-key RGB keyboard, and a sleek haptic trackpad that doubles as a drawing pad for the included stylus. The system includes a touch screen and unique input features not commonly found on thin 14-inch clamshells. The laptop carries a premium $2,500 price and arrives at the end of 2025, risking being eclipsed by upcoming next-gen CPUs. Performance and battery life lag behind some similarly sized clamshells and thin devices without discrete GPUs, creating trade-offs for buyers.
Read at gizmodo.com
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]