Alienwares 30th anniversary laptop reviewed. Great hardware, premium build, but also know what you are getting into.
Alienware 16″ Area-51 Gaming Laptop with Core Ultra 9, 32GB RAM, and RTX 5080 is on sale for $3,699.99, and this build is made for you if you want top-end gaming power without going to a full desktop.
Technobezz is supported by its audience. We may get a commission from retail offers. Add as a preferred source on Google Father's Day 2026 is just around the corner, and we've curated a roundup of 54 ...
Even though Alienware has been around for 30 years, the company hasn't really made an affordable, entry-level gaming laptop. But that changes today with the succinctly named Alienware 15, and based on ...
Alienware is kicking off its 30th anniversary with the world’s first 39-inch 5K OLED gaming monitor, the AW3926QW. It uses RGB Tandem OLED tech with four RGB layers to hit a wild 1,300 nits of peak ...
Alienware has always been known for its over-the-top and expensive gaming PCs, but it just announced the Alienware 15, its first true budget gaming laptop. The Alienware 15 will come with either an ...
To put that into perspective, when I reviewed the 2025 Alienware 16 Area-51, a model with 32GB of RAM, an Nvidia GeForce RTX ...
PCWorld reviews the new Alienware 15 gaming laptop, which starts at $1,299 with RTX 4050 graphics and offers Intel or AMD processor options. The laptop features a 15.3-inch 165Hz display, 16GB DDR5 ...
The “budget” gaming laptop always seemed like a misnomer. In today’s age, with RAM prices through the stratosphere and gadgets suffering from shrinkflation, any notion of affordability is practically ...
Matt Elliott is a senior editor at CNET with a focus on laptops and streaming services. Matt has more than 20 years of experience testing and reviewing laptops. He has worked for CNET in New York and ...
Today we're reviewing a $350 QD-OLED gaming monitor, the Dell Alienware AW2726DM. This is a very interesting offering and possibly the cheapest OLED gaming monitor on the market, making it very ...
About 26,000 times each day, someone tries to break into the computer systems that power the Arizona government — the technology that houses personal details like your birth date, home address and ...