What is the Alienware 13?
The Alienware 13 is the latest portable laptop from Dell’s premium gaming brand. Like the Razer Blade and Gigabyte Aero 14, it aims to offer buyers a compact gaming system that’s powerful enough to play AAA games at 1080p, but small and light enough to be carried around without becoming a burden.
Featuring a wealth of customisation choices, an optional OLED screen and one of the best keyboards I’ve seen on a laptop, the Alienware delivers on performance, but its chunky chassis means it’s a little too heavy and thick to comfortably carry around in a regular satchel or backpack.
Alienware 13 – Design
Dell sells the 2017 Alienware 13 in a wealth of different configurations that range in price from £1249 to £1849. All versions feature the same chassis, ports, keyboard and trackpad as last year’s model, which is both a blessing and a curse.
From a connectivity and usability point of view the design is excellent. Dell has loaded the Alienware with all the connectivity options any modern gamer will ever need. There are two USB 3.0 ports, a single USB-C and Thunderbolt Gen 3 for high-end peripherals, plus an HDMI 2.0, DisplayPort 1.2, Alienware Graphics Amp proprietary connector, Ethernet, headphone socket and microphone jack.
I’m not a fan of the majority of the connections being sat on the back of the laptop. Though some members of the team prefered this setup, for me it reinforces the feeling that Alienware 13 is a desktop replacement that’s designed to spend the majority of its time on a desk, not carried around like a regular laptop.
The new 13 is thinner and lighter than older Alienwares, measuring in at 22mm thick, it feels to large for a regular laptop bag. This is also due to its giant screen bezel, but it’s mainly because the laptop’s cooling and rear ports stick over an inch out of the laptop’s back.
The bump dramatically increases the laptop’s footprint and meant it didn’t comfortably fit in any of the regular 13-inch laptop bags I tried and was an outright bust in my satchel, which has managed to house 15-inch laptops in the past.
The Alienware’s 2.6kg weight is also fairly excessive for a 13-incher. Both the Razer Blade and Aero 14, which have similar specifications to the Alienware, weigh less than 2kg and are much thinner.
The Alienware does feel well made, which is helped by a feeling of density. There’s a lot of stuff inside this 13-inch machine. The magnesium alloy chassis is one of the most robust-feeling I’ve seen, and I’ve no doubt it’ll survive a few knocks while being carried in a bag. It’s also pleasingly resistant to smudges, which is more than can be said for the Razer Blade.
Alienware 13 – Keyboard and trackpad
The keyboard and trackpad remain key selling points for the Alienware 13. Like the 2016 Skylake version, the 2017 models features an Alienware ‘TactX’ keyboard. The keys aren’t as responsive as a dedicated mechanical gaming keyboard, but they’re a noticeable step up from the chiclet keys on rivals such as the Razer Blade. The keys feel more responsive and have a pleasing 2.2mm of travel and solid click action that makes the Razer’s board feel spongy by comparison.
A steel plate underneath the TactX keyboard also eliminates any flex. Even during heated gaming sessions the laptop chassis didn’t bow at all, no matter how hard I mashed the keys. This made it much better to play intense eSports and shooters on than competing gaming laptops, like the Aero 14, which feature fairly malleable plastic cases.
RGB lighting fans will also be pleased to hear that the trackpad and keyboard have AlienFX lighting controls. The pad is limited to single colour configurations, but the keyboard is split into four customisable multi-colour RGB zones. I’m personally not a fan of making my laptop look like a carnival, but it’s nice to have the choice.
The version I tested also came with a Tobii Eye Tracker. The tracker is sat next to the front-facing web camera and, in theory, can be used to control some games and create heat maps of where you were looking when recording gameplay. It should also help save battery power by intelligently dimming the screen when you look away for prolonged periods. This all sounds great, but in practice I found it slightly annoying and turned the tracker off after the first few days, as it was a little too reactive and had a tendency to dim the screen whenever I so much as glanced away from it.
Alienware 13 – Display
The Alienware 13 is available with three screen options. The bottom-end £1249 version comes with a basic 13.3-inch HD (1366 x 768) TN screen, which is a bit cheeky at this price. For a proper screen, you’ll need to can upgrade to the 1080p panel on the two middle £1349 and £1499 models. The flagship £1849 model I tested comes with a premium 13.3-inch QHD (2560 x 1440) OLED touchscreen.
OLED tech is still a rarity in the laptop market, although it’s becoming more common on smartphones and TVs. This tech, on paper, should let the top-spec Alienware offer significantly better black levels and more vibrant colours.
With real-world use the OLED panel doesn’t disappoint. Blacks on the Alienware are among the deepest I’ve seen on a laptop and make for a significantly more immersive gaming experience, especially when playing atmospheric titles like Resident Evil 7. The inkier blacks also make colours look more vibrant, which works great with comic-like games such as Overwatch. I also didn’t notice any input lag, thanks to the screen’s 120Hz refresh rate.
My naked-eye impressions of the OLED screen rang true when I cracked out TrustedReviews’ trusty colorimeter. The screen tests detected a 6331K temperature that’s only a smidgen warmer than the 6500K ideal. The 100% sRGB and DCI P3 colour gamut coverage also makes the Alienware 13 great for artists and video editors, as well as general gamers.
Alienware 13 – Performance
Dell offers the Alienware 13 in a variety of different options which are split into four tiers. The top-end OLED model comes with a quad-core 3.8GHz Intel Core i7-7700HQ CPU, Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060 GPU with 6GB DDR5 VRAM, 16GB of DDR4 RAM clocked at 2400MHz and a 256GB speedy PCIe SSD as standard.
All the tiers below come with 8GB DDR4 RAM clocked at 2400MHz and a smaller, slower 180GB SATA SSD as standard. Those who wish to can also swap the i7 for a lower-end Intel Core i5-7300HQ CPU and swap the GPU for a GTX 1050 or GTX 1050 Ti.
Adding a further layer of complexity, each tier has a variety of different upgrade options that let you increase the size of the SSD and RAM.
The baseline OLED model I reviewed performed pretty much as expected, and matched similarly specced versions of the Razer Blade and Gigabyte Aero 14. The Alienware ran in with 4195 single-core and 14,062 multi-core scores on the CPU-focused Geekbench 4 benchmark. The Blade and Aero 14 scored 4094/12,442 and 4229/12,903 respectively when running the same test.
On the GPU-focused Firestrike Ultra synthetic test the Alienware 13 scored 2658. The score again puts the Alienware on a par with the Razer Blade and Aero 14, which scored 2585 and 2647 respectively on the same test.
This means for 1080p gaming the Alienware is more than up to the task for most titles. Rise of the Tomb Raider’s benchmark ran at a silky smooth 51.37fps at 1080p with the graphics maxed out, as did Drive, which benchmarked at 73.5fps. The newer Ghost Recon Wildlands benchmark also ran at a playable 35.6fps in1080p maxed out, so it’s worth sticking to Nvidia’s recommended settings to get the best out of newer games.
Don’t expect to max out the latest games at 1440p, though. Older titles, like Tomb Raider and Drive, remained playable, running at 39.05fps and 62.2fps respectively in 1440p, but new ones fell below the 30fps mark. Ghost Recon benchmarked a juddery 26.3fps and I never managed to get Resident Evil 7 beyond 28fps with its graphics maxed out. Still, these games look great at a notch below maximum settings, so it’s worth playing around with them to see where the sweet spot is at 1440p.
Heat and noise fortunately weren’t an issue. The thicker chassis’ cooling system does create a minor whirring noise when playing games, but the Alienware 13’s side-facing speakers are loud and clear enough to ensure it never interrupted gaming. The laptop also never came close to hitting dangerous 90-degree temperatures, even during prolonged gaming sessions.
On the topic of speakers, they won’t replace a dedicated sound system or an expensive headset, but they are pretty good by laptop standards. They have enough volume to drown out background noise and bass levels are low enough to ensure explosions and in game effects sound powerful. The high end is also reasonably good, though distortion can occur when you turn the laptop’s volume to max.
Back to performance, the Alienware 13 also worked fine when I connected it to the Oculus Rift and played VR games, such as Robo Recall, stutter-free.
The SSD isn’t the fastest around, however. During my benchmarks I detected 1618MB/s read and 335MB/s write speeds. This puts it behind the Razer Blade which ran in with 2541/356MBps speeds in the same test.
Alienware 13 – Battery
Gaming laptops never have decent battery lives, as they put performance over efficiency, but the Alienware 13’s 76Wh battery is far from the worst I’ve tested. Running TrustedReviews’ synthetic battery test, which loops 10 minutes of web browsing and five minutes of video playback using Powermark with the screen brightness at 150 nits, the Alienware managed to last 5hrs, 9mins. The Blade by comparison struggled to make it past four hours running the same test. The Gigabyte Aero 14 conquered this test, though, with a score of over seven hours.
Gaming put a larger drain on the battery. Playing games off the mains the Alienware never lasted more than a few hours. It also won’t get you through a full working day without needing a charge, but that’s pretty standard for a gaming laptop. Using the 13 as my work laptop starting at 9.30am the laptop tapped out at around 3.00pm.
Should I buy the Alienware 13?
The Alienware 13 isn’t the prettiest gaming laptop around, but it is one of the most flexible and ticks all the right boxes when it comes to functionality. The wealth of customisation options means gamers can tweak it to meet their specific needs and desired price point. Its excellent keyboard and robust metal chassis certainly add appeal over rivals, such as the Razer Blade and Gigabyte Aero 14, for buyers where mobility doesn’t matter so much.
I do wish there were a GTX 1070 model available, which makes taking advantage of the top-specced OLED version’s 1440p screen resolution challenging. I can see the cheaper GTX 1050 Ti version, which comes with a 1080p IPS screen, offering better value for money for most buyers as a result.
Verdict
An excellent gaming laptop with a wealth of customisation options.
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