These were the laptops from CES 2023 that really got my attention

CES is the biggest laptop show of the year — and it’s not close. Dozens of new laptops get launched and updated, and every major (and minor) laptop manufacturer gets in on the fun.

This year was full of interesting concepts, some that stretch the definition of what laptops even are. I’ll save gaming laptops for another list entirely (because there’s a lot), but these are the best laptops from CES 2023 outside the gaming space.

Lenovo YogaBook 9i

The two displays of the Yoga Book 9i on a table.

Remember laptops with foldable screens? Yeah, that was so 2022. The YogaBook 9i represents another take on that same concept, trading out the single foldable screen with two 13.3-inch 2.8K OLED screens connected by a hinge. And while you don’t get the smooth continuous experience of a singular screen, the YogaBook 9i definitely has some tricks up its sleeve.

First off, these two screens can stack vertically, held up by the origami stand. The two screens can also sit side-by-side, and lastly, it can be used in a classic laptop mode. You can use the detachable keyboard and virtual touchpad in this mode, but surprisingly, the haptic feedback touch keyboard Lenovo made just for this laptop is surprisingly good.

I was surprised by just how well-thought-out and premium this device is, especially with how strong all the magnets are. It’s certainly a niche product, but it’s undoubtedly a very interesting laptop.

HP Dragonfly Pro Chromebook

The HP Dragonfly Pro Chromebook with the Digital Trends main page loaded.
Fionna Agomuoh/Digital Trends

The Dragonfly Pro Chromebook is easily the most premium Chromebook ever made. Last year’s Elite Dragonfly did a similar thing, but the Dragonfly Pro takes it one step further. First of all, it has an 8-megapixel webcam, which makes it the sharpest webcam ever put in a Chromebook like this. But that’s really only the tip of the iceberg.

Beyond the webcam, it has a high-resolution 2560 x 1600 screen, a haptic feedback trackpad, RGB backlit keyboard, four speakers, and four Thunderbolt 4 ports.

Performance looks good too, thanks to a base offering of 8GB of RAM, 256GB of storage, and a 12th-gen Core i5 processor. Again, for a Chromebook, it doesn’t get much better than that. You can expect to pay handsomely for a Chromebook of this type, but there’s no question this was one of the standout laptops from the show.

Asus ProArt StudioBook with 3D OLED display

When I heard Asus was putting a 3D screen on a laptop, I couldn’t have been less interested. But when I sat down to actually demo this 3D screen, I was thoroughly impressed. The glasses-free stereoscopic 3D effect is more than just neat — it was convincing.

I’m fully ready to admit that a 3D OLED laptop feels gimmicky. It’s certainly not something anyone was asking for. But that doesn’t make it any less fun. The glasses-free stereoscopic 3D effect is certainly neat, especially when enhanced by the 3.2K resolution, 120Hz refresh rate, and vivid OLED panel.

Most people probably know that a 3D display isn’t going to make you a more efficient or creative content creator, which is what the ProArt StudioBooks are designed for. But as an effect, the “Spatial Vision” technology is a pretty impressive visual trick.

Beyond that, these ProArt StudioBooks are filled to the brim with high-end specs and advanced features, including a haptic feedback trackpad, the Asus Dial rotary control, up to 64GB of upgradeable memory, and the latest RTX 40-series graphics. Whether you opt for the 3D screen or not, you’re getting one of the more impressive and powerful-looking pieces of kit announced at CES this year.

Lenovo ThinkBook Plus Twist

The e-ink screen facing the ThinkBook Plus Twist.

Lenovo has been experimenting with e-ink screens on the ThinkBook Plus laptops over the past few years, but this might be its most fascinating design yet. The lid has a 12-inch e-ink screen on the back and a conventional 13-inch OLED screen on the front. We’ve seen that before, such as on the ThinkBook Plus Gen 2.

But this time around, Lenovo has reengineered the hinge to “twist” a full 360 degrees. Now, there’s something we’ve never seen before. The idea is that with the ThinkBook Plus Twist, you can switch between the e-ink screen and OLED screen more easily, all without losing access to the keyboard and trackpad.

The design of the hinge may end up being more interesting than the product itself, but there’s no question this is a really innovative idea that took a lot of smart engineering to pull off.

ROG Zephyrus M16

OK, OK — I had to sneak one gaming laptop onto the list. And the reason is to highlight the incredible job Asus is doing to bring proper HDR panels to laptops in 2023. Through its Nebula HDR program, it’s putting more and more mini-LED displays on laptops, and the ROG Zephyrus M16 is the best of the bunch. It has 1,024 local dimming zones, which means brighter, higher-contrast screens. It’s not quite the 2,500 zones seen on the MacBook Pro’s Liquid Retina XDR screen, but it should be capable of some really stellar HDR performance nonetheless.

Obviously, on a laptop like the Zephyrus M16, that HDR performance is mostly going to be about gaming. But that applies to watching movies and videos too, as well as content creation. All of that could make the Zephyrus M16 a fantastic do-it-all laptop, as well as a great gaming device.

And more than anything, the Zephyrus M16 is just a really good sign for the Windows ecosystem as a whole. If it hopes to keep up with what Apple is doing with its Macs (or even what televisions are offering to console players), competitive HDR performance is key.

Lenovo ThinkBook 16p Gen 4

The Magic Bay Webcam attached to the top of the ThinkBook Plus Gen 4.

When we reviewed the ThinkBook 16p Gen 3, our reviewer claimed that the laptop just didn’t have the standout features to justify the price. Well, Lenovo must have heard our complaints, because the ThinkBook 16p Gen 4 has a unique feature that’s unlike anything we’ve seen before.

Lenovo calls it the Magic Bay, and essentially, it is a magnetic pogo pin connector right at the top of the display. The Magic Bay allows you to swap out different modules or accessories that can boost certain aspects of your laptop’s capabilities. Some examples include a Magic Bay 4K webcam, Magic Bay Light, and Magic Bay LTE.

Each of these accessories can be snapped onto the top of the laptop, just as a keyboard snaps onto the bottom of a 2-in-1 tablet. It’s a fascinating idea, especially since there’s no good way to build a 4K webcam or ring light into the top bezel of your laptop. These three Magic Bay accessories feel like the tip of the iceberg in terms of what could be offered if a laptop like this became popular, and I love seeing Lenovo adding modularity to a laptop design that wouldn’t otherwise be possible.

Aside from that Magic Bay feature, the ThinkBook 16p Gen 4 looks like a pretty well-stacked laptop. It comes with up to a 3.2K IPS display and a 120Hz refresh rate. And the ThinkBook 16p Gen 4 switches from AMD to Intel, embracing 13th-gen H-series processors and throwing in Nvidia’s latest RTX 40-series graphics too.

Editors’ Recommendations