Is ROG laptop touch screen?

Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo 15 review: a gaming laptop that doesnt need two screens

Dual-screen gaming doesnt come cheap

  • By
  • on September 11, 2020 10:30 am
Asus brings the dual-screen design to a gaming rig.
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Most of the time, if youre reading a review of a dual-screen laptop, you probably only care about one feature: the two screens. Asus previous Duo models, the ZenBook Duo and the ZenBook Pro Duo, were decent devices, but the extra screen was the main attraction and the main justification for their premium price.

Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo 15, though, is different. Its the first gaming laptop Asus has attempted with the dual-screen setup. The software is finally at a point where the second screen is legitimately useful. But the Duo is also a workstation featuring top-of-the-line chips that can compete with the best portable gaming laptops on the market. Screen count aside, its a very capable computer.

Asus says the Duo is aimed at the gamer, the streamer, and the creator.
7.5 Verge Score

Our review of Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo 15

Good Stuff

  • Legitimately useful second screen
  • Decent gaming performance
  • Nice 4K display

Bad Stuff

  • No webcam
  • Quite expensive
  • Awkward keyboard and touchpad placement
Buy for $3,699.99 from B&H Buy for $3,699.00 from Amazon

But its also quite expensive for a 15-inch gaming laptop youre definitely paying extra for the dual screens. And while the ScreenPad certainly has its uses, Asus hasnt quite figured out how to unlock its full potential yet. Id hold off on buying this until they do.

The Duo I tested goes for brace yourself $3,699. It comes with Intels Core i9-10980HK, 32GB of RAM [DDR4], and 2TB of storage. The star of the show is Nvidias RTX 2080 Super Max-Q, its top-end RTX GPU for thin gaming laptops.

The Zephyrus is set up similarly to other Duo models. My unit has a 15.6-inch 4K UHD primary display. You can also get a 300Hz FHD panel, which would be the better pick if youre buying this primarily to play games. Below that screen is the ScreenPad, a 14.1-inch wide, 3840 x 1100 touchscreen panel built into the back half of the keyboard deck, which lifts slightly off the chassis and tilts toward you at a 13-degree angle. Crammed into the front half of the chassis is an RGB keyboard with a tiny touchpad to its right.

You can charge with USB-C, with a 65W adapter.
Two audio jacks gives you more room to stream with an external microphone.

The ScreenPad is too small to really do any work on [though the tilt means you dont have to crane your neck to read it the way you do on the ZenBooks]. But in a productivity setting, its a tool you can use the way you might use a tiny external display.

You can use the ScreenPad the way you might use a tiny external display

Swapping a window from one screen to the other is as easy as clicking and dragging it. While you do so, a small menu pops up with options to send the window to the opposite display, pin it to the Launcher, or extend it to occupy both screens.

You can load the ScreenPad up with your distractions Slack, Twitter, Facebook, Spotify, etc. to keep them accessible, but out of the way. You can keep reference documents on the bottom while you work up top. You can take notes downstairs while streaming a lecture upstairs. [The Zephyrus has stylus support, but doesnt ship with a stylus.]

AGREE TO CONTINUE: Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo 15

Every smart device now requires you to agree to a series of terms and conditions before you can use it contracts that no one actually reads. Its impossible for us to read and analyze every single one of these agreements. But we started counting exactly how many times you have to hit agree to use devices when we review them since these are agreements most people dont read and definitely cant negotiate.

To use the ROG Zephyrus Duo 15, you have to agree to:

  • Request for your region and keyboard layout
  • Windows 10 License Agreement and Asus License Agreement
  • Microsoft account
  • Windows Hello PIN
  • Register for an Asus account

The following agreements are optional:

  • Connecting to Wi-Fi
  • Activity history
  • Sync an Android phone
  • OneDrive backup
  • Microsoft 365
  • Set up Cortana
  • Privacy settings, including online speech recognition, find my device, inking and typing, advertising ID, location, diagnostic data, and tailored experiences
  • Register for a McAfee account with your Asus credentials
  • Save your email address on your device

Thats seven mandatory agreements and 15 optional ones to use the ROG Zephyrus Duo 15.

Asus has a few handy features to help you organize everything. In the Launcher menu, a secondary dock that lives on the left side of the ScreenPad, you can quickly access a number of apps, including Number Key [a virtual numpad], Handwriting [where you can scribble on the ScreenPad, and the text will show up wherever your cursor is], and Quick Key [where you can tap various commands like cut, copy, and paste]. You can add whatever programs you want. Theres also a button that immediately swaps the two screens tabs and automatically resizes them to fit, and a toggle that locks and unlocks the keyboard. And you can create task groups of apps or tabs, which you can then open up later with a single click.

Asus has really worked out ScreenPads kinks since the days of the ZenBook Pro Duo, its first shot at a dual-screen OLED desktop replacement. Everything worked as advertised. Windows resized appropriately and kept the widths they were assigned. Things closed and opened when I needed them to. All told, as we saw with the ZenBook Duo, the ScreenPad works just fine for everyday use.

But whether its well-suited to gaming is another question.

The ScreenPad works just fine for everyday use
The GPU is paired with 8GB of DDR6 VRAM.

Off the bat: this is a real gaming laptop. It ran Shadow of the Tomb Raider at 1080p at an average of 87fps. That was at the highest settings, with ray tracing on Ultra. Thats not the best result youll see, but its only slightly worse than the Razer Blade Pro 17, which averaged 95fps. On Civilization VI, a game where I can see the dual-screen setup being quite useful, the Zephyrus averaged 145fps at the highest settings. Of course, this model is locked to displaying 60fps, so you wont be able to see those frame rates. Id recommend that serious gamers go for the 300Hz configuration [especially since youll see a significant frame rate drop if you try to max out these titles in 4K thats a big ask even of modern desktops].

Its easy to see how a second screen could be a great addition to a gaming rig. While you play, you could keep Discord chats and stream controls on deck, follow along with a YouTube tutorial, swap between Spotify playlists, adjust settings on the fly in Asus Armoury Crate app, or keep an eye on clocks in MSI Afterburner. Im sure you have ideas of your own. Some of these tricks do work, but some are still more trouble than theyre worth. It depends on the game.

Overwolf has some apps designed for the Duo, for games including League of Legends, Dota 2, and CS:GO.

For example, if you run Tomb Raider in full-screen mode and try to click on a Discord chat downstairs, it minimizes the game. You can fix this problem by using windowed mode, but tinkering with the ScreenPad still tabs you out. Civ VI was friendlier to the ScreenPad; the game stayed open and kept going while I hopped between displays, but typing in my downstairs Discord chat still cut the audio, so I wouldnt have wanted to do it often. For both games, I ended up mostly using the ScreenPad to keep an eye on Afterburner while I played and make the occasional adjustment in Armoury Crate.

So, again, the Duos form factor does have its uses for gaming particularly with turn-based titles like Civ where you may just fancy a quick break from time to time. But you should manage your expectations because its not ideal for all the use cases you might think of. [And if Im buying a laptop for gaming, Id really prefer not to have to run anything in windowed mode.]

You dont need these specs to get this performance

Asus says its working with game developers to incorporate the second screen into some upcoming titles. In Dying Light 2, for example, it says youll be able to keep your co-op chats, inventory, and mission log on the second screen. It would certainly be a huge help in a game like Civ VI if you could relegate some stats and overlays to the ScreenPad and reserve the primary display for gameplay. Those features arent here yet, though, and that mitigates the benefit of the dual-screen setup.

Elsewhere, it should go without saying that the Core i9 and 32GB of RAM can handle a heavy load of office work [Twitch, Discord, Slack, Spotify, photo editing, Zoom calls, and a heap of Chrome tabs] just fine. Of course, thats the case with most premium gaming laptops. You dont need anything close to these specs to get that performance. It did very well with creative work, completing an export of a 5-minute, 33-second 4K video in two minutes and 56 seconds. Thats faster than the Dell XPS 17, the Alienware m15 r3, and the MSI GS66 Stealth took to complete the same task. The Blade Pro 17 was only a bit faster, taking two minutes and 42 seconds.

Good luck if youre left-handed!

The one thing to note is that you should expect the Zephyrus Duo to live on a desk and thats not just because it weighs 5.29 pounds [2.39kg]. I averaged around an hour and 48 minutes of battery life [The test involved fully working in both screens, hopping between a dozen Chrome tabs, Slack, and Spotify, on the Battery Saver profile, with the primary screen at 200 nits of brightness and the secondary screen at 50 percent.] Thats not necessarily unexpected for a 4K gaming laptop running two screens and an RGB keyboard, but its still not a great result the Blade Pro 17 got two and a half hours of the same workload.

Additionally, get ready for some heat. The Duo uses Asus AAS Plus cooling, which includes a 28.5mm vent behind the ScreenPad, five heatpipes, four heatsinks, a unique thermal paste called Liquid Metal, and an anti-dust channel thats supposed to dispel debris from the chassis to prevent it from accumulating on the fan fins. [Dont worry, it doesnt spray dust or anything.] The system kept the processor from throttling, but the bottom of the chassis got so hot that the laptop wasnt feasible to use on my lap, even when I wasnt running games.

You can hook up an external GPU with Thunderbolt 3, or multiple monitors with DisplayPort.

And finally, you can forget using this touchpad, which is a tiny 2.3 x 2.9 affair with discrete clickers [though it can become a touchscreen NumPad, which is nifty]. Since there is no wrist rest, the keyboard, while colorful, isnt super comfortable to use because theres nowhere to put your hands. [The Zephyrus ships with a rubber wrist rest which is nice, but doesnt help all that much.] I imagine anyone who buys this will be plugging a mouse in immediately. Again, none of this is unexpected for a 15-inch workstation, but if youre looking for something that you could occasionally chill on the couch with, count the Zephyrus out.

The good news is that if you decide to plug in peripherals, youve got a plentiful port selection. Theres a power port, a microphone jack, and a headphone jack on the left side; two USB-A ports and a USB-C with DisplayPort, Thunderbolt 3, and Power Delivery 3.0 on the right side; and another USB-A, an Ethernet, and an HDMI on the back.

Browsing Twitter while running Tomb Raider.

Overall, the Zephyrus Duo 15 is a capable gaming laptop. But the 60Hz screen on this configuration limits the capabilities of its chips. [And lets be honest: while Asus may be trying to market this laptop to content creators, its a Zephyrus, and most people will be buying it for games.]

I cant see myself using the ScreenPad super often

Given that you can purchase models like the Blade Pro 17 that deliver comparable frame rates for several hundred dollars cheaper, what youre paying the big bucks for is an extra bit of storage and the second screen.

The ScreenPad does add to the gaming experience. But it hasnt revolutionized it [at least, not yet]. Until titles come out that are really optimized for this setup, I cant see myself using it super often. The Zephyrus Duo is an impressive piece of technology. It may be worth $3,699 in the future but its not there quite yet.

Photography by Monica Chin / The Verge

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Comments

No Webcam is a plus for me! 1:48 of battery life thats the real kicker, but sadly not all that unexpected.

By Winklemeier on 09.11.20 10:46am

I think It would be interesting if the position of the keyboard and second screen were flipped, and then make the second screen be able to seamlessly switch between being a second monitor if needed, and a huge trackpad when not in use.

By brandon.dean on 09.11.20 10:56am

Wouldnt it be far more reasonable to just get a portable second screen? Preferably one that you can set up in portrait mode?

By indignantgoat on 09.11.20 11:51am

Its so beautiful and so fantastically over the top! Unusable trackpad be dammed, I want one immediately.

By wazfaw on 09.11.20 1:13pm

Would be a nice streaming laptop but no webcam which is kind of a head scratcher.

By omo on 09.11.20 3:05pm

If youre serious enough about streaming to get a higher-end device like this, a laptop webcam was never going to cut it for you anyway. If they cant fit a high-quality webcam in, better to leave it out altogether as the user is going to have to connect one anyway.

By BeeksElectric on 09.11.20 8:28pm

Not that I have the money to buy it, but Im looking at this as a creator. You mentioned photo editing in passing and video export time but I would also have liked to know its render speed when editing video in Premiere Pro.

By iAmDeathTheKid on 09.11.20 4:32pm

I have the high end Core-i9 model and do video editing. I use Da Vinci Resolve and edit footage from my Bmpcc4k. I edit raw footage from that camera with this with no lag. Once you start adding colors and effects then you need to give it time to render before your playback is smooth but it takes seconds to render depending on the effect. I do mostly basic coloring and animation though. Rendering export time is really fast, though depending on what you are rendering itll switch between CPU and GPU. I havent had any issues with yhis laptop where I felt like it was dragging or slowing down my work flow. Hope that helps!

By Sergio Martinez on 09.13.20 10:01am

It definitely helps, thank you. Now if I could just start a cartel so I can afford this thing.

By iAmDeathTheKid on 09.13.20 5:58pm

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