At Computex 2026, Acer is leaning into both sides of its PC strategy. There are lighter, AI-ready Swift laptops for everyday work and creativity, and a bigger bet on gaming with the new Predator Atlas 8 handheld.
It’s a combo that suits where the market’s going – more on-device AI as standard, and more people wanting serious gaming that doesn’t have to stay on a desk – that, based on what we saw at Computex, are well worthy of our Innovation Awards.
The Swift Air 14 is thin and light, but doesn’t skimp on AI
The Swift Air 14 is Acer’s latest thin-and-light laptop, built around Intel Core Series 3 processors and a dedicated NPU that delivers up to 17 TOPS of AI performance. That’s enough to handle common AI-assisted tasks locally – things like live captions, background blur, and noise cancellation – without sending everything to the cloud.
Design-wise, it stays sleek and portable. The all-aluminium chassis weighs 1.19kg and is 12.9mm at its thinnest point, putting it among the lighter mainstream options in Acer’s current lineup.
Battery life is another big focus. Acer quotes up to 19 hours of video playback, and fast charging can take the 70Wh battery to 50% in 30 minutes – handy for students, commuters, and anyone who’d rather not carry a charger.
Up front, there’s a 14in WUXGA display with a 120Hz refresh rate and 100% sRGB colour coverage. Audio runs through quad speakers with DTS :X Ultra spatial sound, and you get dual Thunderbolt 4 ports, Intel Wi‑Fi 6E, and Bluetooth 5.3 for connectivity.
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The Predator Atlas 8 harnesses Intel’s latest Arc G-series hardware
Where Acer’s Swift updates lean into everyday AI, the Predator Atlas 8 is all about portable gaming. Its big draw is Intel’s new Arc G‑Series platform, paired with discrete‑class Intel Arc graphics options designed to deliver PC‑style performance in a handheld.
At the top end, the Atlas 8 can be configured with up to an Intel Arc G3 Extreme processor and Intel Arc B390 graphics, with a lower‑tier Arc B370 option also listed.
Acer is highlighting ray tracing support and Intel XeSS 3 (AI‑powered upscaling) as key to smoother frame rates and higher‑fidelity visuals in demanding games. There’s also Intel Endurance Gaming, which aims to balance frame rate and power draw so you can stretch playtime instead of burning through the battery while chasing uncapped FPS.
Acer is also talking up sustained performance, not just peak numbers. The Atlas 8 uses a dual‑fan Predator AeroBlade cooling setup, including what Acer claims is the first metal fan in a handheld, with 89 blades at 0.1mm thickness and up to 10% more airflow. There’s also ‘Vortex Flow’ internal tuning to push hot air out more efficiently.
Controls are specced for flexibility too, with Hall‑effect analogue triggers and a dual‑mode trigger design – a micro‑switch for instant clicks or analogue travel for racing and sims. PredatorSense is built in for performance modes, monitoring, and customisation.
Acer has confirmed that the Predator Atlas 8 is slated for an October 2026 rollout across North America, EMEA, and Australia, while the Swift laptops will be arriving slightly earlier, with launches scheduled for July and August 2026.
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