Why this 16-inch gaming laptop is a smarter buy than a desktop in 2026


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pros and cons

Pros

  • Blazing-fast performance
  • Fantastic Cherry MX keyboard
  • New matte OLED option
  • Solid, high-design build
Cons

  • Expensive
  • Heavy, even for a gaming laptop
  • Very limited battery

more buying choices

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Are laptops the new desktops? Dell’s highest-end gaming laptops go head to head with desktop power — and with the exorbitant cost of RAM and associated hardware, the price gap isn’t as big as it once was. I’ve been using Dell’s Alienware 16 Area-51 for the past few weeks and have felt completely spoiled by all the power. 

Also: I’ve used Dell’s new XPS 16 for a week, and it’s the Windows laptop to beat in 2026

Everything about this laptop is fast. Apps load instantly, the device starts up in mere seconds, and it exudes power. The fans above each side of the keyboard move a palpable amount of air and aren’t just visible — they’re illuminated, a statement about the sophisticated cooling system. 

Physically, the laptop is nearly identical to last year’s Alienware 16, with the biggest changes under the hood — upgraded Intel processors (up to the Intel Core Ultra 9 290HX Plus), a fantastic CherryMX keyboard, and something totally new: an OLED display.

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Physical build

This device is solid, with the stalwart, future-forward build you’d come to expect from Alienware. The “Liquid Teal” colorway, with rounded edges, creates a slick, xenomorphic aesthetic that’s unique to the brand. Unfortunately, the top cover is also a fingerprint magnet. 

All the ports are located on the back — except the SD card slot and headphone jack. Clocking in at 7.5 pounds, the 16-inch Area-51 is at the limit of what you’d consider portable. With the 2.2-pound, 360-watt power brick, you’re looking at a total package of 9.7 pounds — doable for occasional transport, but probably not something you’ll want to lug around daily.

Also: Not enough people are talking about the most capable Lenovo laptop right now

Dell has cited consumer feedback as a driving force behind its design approach this year, and one of the biggest requests from Alienware users was for an OLED display. It’s finally here on the 16-inch Area-51 with a 240Hz refresh, 620-nit peak HDR brightness, and 0.2ms response time. The matte finish is good at mitigating glare, and although the display doesn’t have the eye-popping contrast of a glossy display, games and media look fantastic on it. 

I should note, however, that if you want the OLED, you have to commit to the high-end Intel Core Ultra 290HX CPU and 32GB of RAM, bringing the price to a starting cost of $3,500. Dell often locks certain features to hardware, but it would have been nice to have a 16GB/OLED option as well.

Alienware 16 Area-51

Kyle Kucharski/ZDNET

All this hardware requires more power, and that’s the other big change. The Alienware 16 has a higher power ceiling of 240W: 175W of that figure is total graphics power (TGP), and 65W is thermal design power (TDP). This increased power availability is designed to give the hardware the juice it needs to power gaming on the highest graphics settings. 

As expected, thermals also need to be improved to compensate. Dell’s Cryo-Chamber cooling structure sits at the bottom, with the design allowing additional space between the laptop and the surface it’s on. Dell also cites 32% larger fans to move up to 35% more air through the system. More airflow means more cooling, and when they’re cranking, you can feel it moving. 

Also: I was not expecting a Razer keyboard to enhance my office productivity – here’s how it did

The cooling structure is visible, too. Laptop configurations with the GeForce RTX 5070 Ti or higher feature a clear Gorilla Glass panel that shows the AlienFX fans and provides a glimpse into the internals for an enthusiast desktop vibe — complete with RGB lighting effects, of course. 

With all this heat mitigation, I never felt the laptop reach uncomfortable levels, though the 16-inch did feel slightly warmer on average than the 18-inch. 

Usability and battery

The keyboard is nothing short of fantastic. It features Cherry MX ultra low-profile keys with 1.8mm of key travel and the distinctly clicky, tactile feel you’d expect. The keyboard is well-designed, properly laid out, and spacious — and about as good as it gets for any laptop on the market right now. 

The 16-inch doesn’t feature a number pad (that’s reserved for the 18-inch), but it still has the dedicated mic and volume keys on the far right side that I personally find practical. 

Alienware 16 Area-51

Kyle Kucharski/ZDNET

By extension, the trackpad is good, but it’s not haptic and on the small side. I would say it’s a good example of no-bull, functional tech that eschews flashy design elements for reliability… Just kidding. This thing lights up — and not just in a static color. The trackpad pulsates neon rainbow, breathes like a living organism, and yes, it looks sweet as hell. But I do have to say: for a $4k laptop, haptic tech would be very nice; even if that means losing the lights.

Of course, you can turn the lights off and customize each key to your heart’s content in the Alienware Command Center app, with stored profiles for when you need to tone down the show in the office (or if you’re running on battery). 

Also: The secret to USB port colors: Why your device feels slow in the wrong slot

Speaking of which, and you probably already know where this is going, while this is an incredibly powerful laptop with a massive battery that pulls in lots of power, it’s not designed to be untethered for long. Dell cites over six hours of battery life, but that’s with ideal video-streaming conditions. 

For real-world usability, you can expect around three hours for typical Windows tasks in balanced mode. If you’re gaming, expect much less: one to two hours, depending on what you’re running and how demanding the graphics are. 

Alienware 16 Area-51

Kyle Kucharski/ZDNET

The two Thunderbolt 5 ports on the side support 100W power delivery, so you don’t need the 360W charging brick for everyday tasks. But if you’re gaming, you’ll need to, as 100W power isn’t near enough to keep this device running while you play “Crimson Desert” on max graphics for hours on end. 

Gaming performance

Dell says the 2026 Alienware 16 Area-51 delivers 10% to 12% improved performance compared to last year’s model, thanks to the increased 175W TGP and the brand-new Arrow Lake-HX chipset. 

I ran through a handful of games in my Steam library, including Monster Hunter Wilds, Cyberpunk 2077, No Man’s Sky, and Eve Online, and found exceptional performance across the board on the Alienware 16 Area-51. Even better, there are very few noticeable performance drops in Balanced mode rather than Performance mode, despite significantly better cooling. 

In my benchmarking of the Alienware 16 Area-51, the laptop scored an impressive 52.8 FPS in 3DMark’s Steel Nomad 4K test, putting it up there even with high-end 18-inch devices. 

When it comes to creative tasks, the Alienware 16 Area-51 is more than capable, with smooth, responsive performance rendering video in Adobe Premiere Pro and DaVinci Resolve. I will note, however, that the fans can be rather distracting while editing video, reaching up to 50 dB (or more in Overdrive mode) and absolutely overpowering the audio you’re working with. For that reason, I’d recommend using headphones for more precise audio control. 

ZDNET’s buying advice

The Alienware 16 Area-51 exudes premium power. It’s built like a tank and requires a commitment to both the serious-gaming use case and the associated cost. If you’re willing to go there, however, both the 16- and 18-inch laptops are unapologetically powerful machines that will run the latest triple-A titles for years to come. 

My biggest concern with the Alienware 16 Area-51 is the cost. The configuration I tested with the 290HX Plus CPU, 32GB of RAM, and GeForce RTX 5080 will run you four grand, and the cheapest possible variant starts at $3,149. If you want the OLED, be prepared to spend at least $3,500, since you can’t decouple it from the high-end 290HX processor. 

Also: Should you replace your desktop with a laptop setup? I tried with this Dell, and didn’t mind it

The 16-inch also has some trade-offs compared to the 18-inch: it runs a little hotter and performs a little worse. The display is technically better on the 16-inch (there’s no OLED on the 18 yet), but it has a higher refresh rate at 300Hz. In terms of price, the 18-inch is not all that much more, but the performance is a noticeable step up. 

Unless you’re dead set on an OLED and want a 16-inch display, the Alienware 18 should be a consideration, especially since you’re already quite firmly in heavy-gaming-laptop territory with both models.





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In the closing days of August, two federal appeals courts issued noteworthy decisions at the intersection of workplace conduct, computer law and online platforms.  The two opinions were released during a period of time this past summer amidst the continuing flurry of AI-related case developments and perhaps did not get wide media attention (but which might prove to be important cases in the future).

  • Second Circuit – CDA Section 230. The court ruled that a software platform was not entitled to CDA Section 230 immunity – at least at the early stage in the case – based on allegations that it actively contributed to the unlawful software content at issue by manufacturing and distributing an emissions-control “defeat devices.” (U.S. v. EZ Lynk, SEZC, No. 24-2386 (2d Cir. Aug. 20, 2025)). The opinion’s discussion of what it means to be a “developer” of content has implications for future litigation that might involve generative AI, app stores, marketplaces, and IoT ecosystems, where certain fact patterns could blur the line between passive hosting and active co-development.
  • Third Circuit – CFAA and Trade Secrets: Days later, the Third Circuit issued an important decision (subsequently amended, with minor changes that did not change the holding) that further develops CFAA case law post-Van Buren. The court held that CFAA liability, an anti-hacking statute, does not extend to workplace computer use violations. (NRA Group, LLC v. Durenleau, No. 24-1123 (3d Cir. Aug. 26, 2025) (vacated by Oct. 7, 2025 amended opinion), reh’g en banc denied (Oct. 7, 2025)). The court also addressed and rejected a novel claim of trade secret misappropriation based on access to account passwords.     

Together, the cases show how courts continue to interpret the reach of technology-related statutes in contexts never contemplated when those laws were first enacted.

Second Circuit – CDA Section 230 Immunity Denied for Software Platform

The Second Circuit EZ Lynk case centered on whether a platform that connects vehicles to cloud-based diagnostic and customization software could be held liable under Section 203 of the Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. § 7522(a)(3)(B), which prohibits the manufacture and sale of devices used to defeat vehicle emissions controls. The government argued that the EZ Lynk System, which consists of an electronic device, a mobile app and third party software (or “defeat tunes”), was an illegal “defeat device” because it enabled car owners to download and install “delete tunes” that disable manufacturer-installed emissions controls.  EZ Lynk countered that its system was a neutral tool that, by itself, has no effect on emissions controls and therefore EZ Lynk should be shielded from liability by CDA Section 230 because it merely hosted the third-party software at issue. 

In March 2024 the lower court dismissed the government’s case on the main count on CDA grounds, reasoning that even if the EZ Lynk System was a defeat device, EZ Lynk was only acting as a publisher of third party content. The lower court concluded that EZ Lynk’s alleged collaboration with defeat tune creators and EZ Lynk’s employees’ social media interactions with users to assist in installation and use did not amount to “material contributions” that would defeat Section 230 immunity.  

The Second Circuit reversed. It found the complaint adequately alleged that EZ Lynk “directly and materially contributed to” the creation of delete tunes and may not have acted as a neutral intermediary. Among other things, the court pointed to allegations that EZ Lynk worked closely with major “delete tune” creators (e.g., previewing devices with them before launch and ensuring compatibility) and administered a social media forum where its employees and partners advised customers on using delete tunes. At this early stage, the court held such allegations were sufficient to defeat EZ Lynk’s CDA Section 230 defense as it may have been an “information content provider” in part.[1]

The decision reaffirms that Section 230 immunity may not apply where a platform “directly and materially contributed to the underlying illegal conduct.”  Although the context of this government enforcement was a novel one for interpreting CDA immunity, the reasoning may resonate in other settings, including software platforms that promote and directly assist app developers with unlawful functions or modifications (e.g., for IoT devices) and marketplaces that facilitate illegal product use, raising the risk of being treated as a co-developer of unlawful content.

Third Circuit – CFAA and Trade Secret Claims Against Employees

In NRA Group, the company argued that two employees violated the CFAA when one of them, while home sick, asked a colleague to log into her work computer to retrieve a spreadsheet of system passwords to help her remotely access a work document, all in violation of workplace computer policies. 

CFAA Issue

The Third Circuit held that the employees’ conduct did not violate the CFAA because: (1) The statute targets “hacking” or code-based unauthorized access, not workplace policy violations by current employees; (2) Both employees were authorized users of the employer’s computer systems; even though the employees may have violated computer use policies (e.g., sharing credentials, emailing passwords), the court found they acted within their granted access rights. The Third Circuit affirmed dismissal of the company’s action against the employees. [Note: This holding is reminiscent of a prior Ninth Circuit decision rejecting CFAA liability against an employee that emailed internal documents to himself after being given credentials to do so from a colleague].  

Applying the Supreme Court’s Van Buren decision, the Third Circuit held that the CFAA’s “exceeds authorized access” provision covers those who obtain information from computer networks or databases to which their computer access does not extend. As such, the court stated that “absent evidence of code-based hacking, the CFAA does not countenance claims premised on a breach of workplace computer-use policies by current employees.” In the Van Buren decision’s most cited metaphor, the Supreme Court characterized the CFAA “authorization” scheme as a “gates-up-or-down” approach where the CFAA prohibits accessing data one is not authorized to access.  Under this understanding, one either can or cannot access a computer system, and one either can or cannot access certain areas within the system, as some areas are fully “off limits.” Following this rationale, the Third Circuit held: “Under Van Buren, the ‘gates’ of access were ‘up’ for both women—neither hacked into NRA’s systems. […] No one hacked anything by deploying code to enter a part of NRA’s systems to which they had no access.” 

The Van Buren decision continues to shape CFAA litigation beyond the employment context. Its reasoning has featured prominently in disputes over web scraping (e.g., in this closely-watched litigation) where courts must decide whether a website’s “authorization gates” are open or closed to scrapers and whether technical measures suffice to close those gates. 

Trade Secret – Passwords Issue

In an issue we don’t ever recall seeing in recent years – even the court found caselaw on this point was “thin and undeveloped” – the Third Circuit also considered the company’s trade secret claim based on the allegation that the creation and emailing of the password spreadsheet at issue constituted trade secret misappropriation.  The court rejected the claim, finding that the passwords themselves are “letters and numbers” and are not protectable trade secrets because they lack independent economic value apart from what they protect.  Under general law, trade secrets must have independent economic value, and while the passwords were a compilation of data, they were not bundled with other, presumably protectable information like raw customer information or pricing strategies.  Unlike a proprietary formula or customer list, the value of a password lies only in its role as a barrier, one that can be eliminated simply by changing it.


[1] In pertinent part, Section 230(c) states: “No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.” 47 U.S.C. § 230(c)(1). The Complaint alleges the EZ Lynk Cloud is a platform on which people exchange information in the form of software. As a side note, the appeals court noted that it was not ruling on whether software is “information” under Section 230 – in most cases, “information” typically pertains to content, in many forms. Though, it did cite other decisions that found that software could be “information provided by another content provider,” including one decision where an app store was protected by CDA immunity for losses from a fraudulent crypto wallet app (a ruling that was later affirmed by the Second Circuit).



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