The Huawei Matebook X Pro has featured before on Creative Bloq, back in 2022, when we were hugely impressed by its looks, performance and ease of use.

Fast-forward to today, and I find myself testing its successor, which is now Intel Core Ultra 7-powered, AI-boosted and equipped with Intel’s new generation of integrated graphics, Intel Arc.

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Specs as tested
CPU: Intel Core Ultra 9 185H
Graphics: Intel Arc Graphics
Memory: 32GB
Screen size: 14.2in OLED touchscreen
Resolution: 3120 x 2080 (3:2)
Refresh rate: 120Hz max
Colour gamut (measured): 100% sRGB, 94% AdobeRGB, 100% P3, 1000 nits
Storage: 2TB SSD
Connectivity: 2x USB-C 4.0, 1x Thunderbolt 4 (all support power delivery and DisplayPort)
Dimensions: 310 x 222 x 13.5 mm
Weight: 980g
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ASUS ProArt P16 (H7606) benchmark scores
Geekbench 6 Row 0 – Cell 1
CPU single-core: 2,345
CPU multi-core: 13,487
GPU OpenCL: 36,288
Cinebench 2024 Row 4 – Cell 1
Single-core: 102
Multi-core: 820
PCMark 10 Row 7 – Cell 1
Total: 6,972
Essentials: 11,050
Productivity: 8,276
Digital Content Creation: 10,056
3D Mark: Time Spy: 4,082 @ 24.5fps, Fire Strike: 8,727 @ 45.9fps, Night Raid: 28,800 @ 212.8fps
Handbrake: 5m 8s @62.4fps
PugetBench Photoshop: 6,750
Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED (UX5304)

ASUS Zenbook S 13

Super lightweight, super good-looking and a super-performer for its price, this is a hybrid worker’s dream and a fair bit cheaper than the Matebook X Pro.

Apple MacBook Air M2 2022

Macbook Air M2 (2022)

The lightweight MacBook is still a great laptop, but its lower price is reflected in lower performance than you’ll find on-board the Huawei. Also, no touchscreen.

HP OMEN Transcend 14 (2024)

HP Omen Transcend 14

If you need that extra graphics prowess, the HP Omen has similar CPU performance plus a 40-series graphics card to handle 3D modelling (and Black Myth: Wukong after work) for only a little bit more money.