PCWorld

Alienware 17 R4: Worth its weight in gold

If there’s any gaming laptop as recognizable year to year as Razer’s Blade line, it’s probably Alienware’s. Following a redesign a few years back, the humbly named Alienware 17 has stayed pretty much the same ever since, at least on the outside.

And you know what that means: Time to hit the gym if you want to do anything with this laptop besides set it on a desk and forget about it.

THE BUILD: BIGFOOT

The Alienware 17 R4 (currently priced at $2,549 on Amazon) is still so big. Just staggeringly huge. With so many following Razer’s lead and slimming down to actual laptop size as opposed to so-called “desktop replacement” proportions, I keep expecting Alienware to do the same.

But no. Year after year, Alienware’s laptops remain gigantic—the better to disperse heat, and therefore utilize the full (or fuller) potential of all those expensive parts inside.

I get it. Really, I do. You’re paying for performance, you want that performance, and Alienware’s 17-inch laptop will give it to you. (More on that later.) But it’s damn near impossible to haul anywhere, so don’t

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from PCWorld

PCWorld5 min readSecurity
How Do I Remove Malware From My PC?
Every device you use is under attack. And malware isn’t just a prank that slows down your PC anymore—it’s big business. Modern malware is the domain of organized crime, from ransomware that holds your files hostage to keyloggers and Trojans designed
PCWorld4 min read
Nvidia’s RTX 40-series Super GPUs make GeForce great again
Nvidia unveiled a trio of new RTX 40-series Super graphics cards during its CES 2024 virtual keynote. Nvidia introduced the Super branding for the RTX 20-series, and these new ones match their predecessors in more than name. Like the RTX 20-series be
PCWorld2 min read
Microsoft’s Copilot AI Can Now Analyze Your Personal Files
Microsoft appears to have pushed the ability to upload documents, screenshots, and images to Windows 11’s Copilot AI assistant, allowing you to ask it to make sense of documents stored on your PC. Being able to “query” a document is a subtly powerful

Related Books & Audiobooks