Snapdragon X Elite has been getting me nervously excited over the past couple of months. The promises were lofty and the benchmarks from Qualcomm’s own reference laptops were encouraging.
But these results were cherry-picked to put the company’s chip in its best light (this is marketing after all) and we knew nothing about the battery life except for some big numbers being thrown around Microsoft Build and Computex 2024.
And now that I’ve been using the Asus Vivobook S 15 with the new arm-based silicon for a while now, I can safely say one thing: Qualcomm wasn’t kidding. Microsoft’s been looking for its big moment to take on the might of the M3 MacBook Air and all of Apple Silicon. Snapdragon X Elite laptops are ready to do just that.
From the impressively zippy performance through my day-to-day (including some prosumer tasks too) to the sheer longevity of the 70Wh battery, Arm is a complete U-turn from the x86 story we always see in the best Windows laptops of semi-decent performance and bad battery life.
There are a few reasons to hesitate a little. The design is very ordinary, Copilot+ PC features are taking a while to launch because of security risks, and the wait time for native Arm versions of all your favorite apps could also be long.
But similar frustrations didn’t stop me from loving my M1 MacBook Air back in 2020. And thanks to that shocking stamina paired with very competitive speeds, it hasn’t stopped me from heralding the revolution Windows has been craving for so long.
Asus Vivobook S 15: Cheat Sheet
- What is it? A super premium laptop — one of the first to pack the brand new Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite chip!
- Who is it for? For people looking for a big-screen laptop that perfectly balances great performance with stellar battery life.
- How much does it cost? You can pick one up for $1,299 / £1,299.
- What do we like? The OLED screen is mouthwatering (of course), and Snapdragon X Elite is a tectonic shift in the kind of stamina and speed you expect from a Windows laptop.
- What don’t we like? The much-hyped Copilot+ PC features have been delayed, Arm versions of apps will also take a while (meaning you have to rely on a mostly consistent translation layer). And while it’s certainly premium in feel, this laptop looks a little dull.
Asus Vivobook S 15: Specs
Header Cell – Column 0 | Asus Vivobook S 15 |
---|---|
Price | $1,299 (starting) |
Display | 15.6-inch 3K OLED with 120Hz refresh rate |
CPU | Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E 78 100 (up to 3.4 GHz, 12 cores) |
GPU | Qualcomm Adreno GPU |
RAM | 16GB LPDDR5X (up to 32GB) |
Storage | 1TB PCIe Gen 4 SSD |
Ports | 2x USB-4, 2x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A, MicroSD card reader, HDMI 2.1, 3.5mm audio jack |
Connectivity | Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4 |
Dimensions | 13.9 x 8.9 x 0.6 inches |
Weight | 3.1 pounds |
Asus Vivobook S 15: What I liked
This is our first foray into the world of Snapdragon X Elite — and the love affair with Qualcomm has already started. But first, just a quick heads-up that these test results are my own and not numbers pulled from our testing lab. Rest assured, you’ll see our official numbers real soon!
It’s (mostly) faster than an M3 MacBook Air
Snapdragon X Elite has the MacBook Air M3 in its sights — something Qualcomm’s made no bones about admitting. Because of that, it should come as no surprise that the Vivobook S 15 absolutely holds up performance-wise.
Header Cell – Column 0 | Asus Vivobook S 15 (Snapdragon X Elite) | MacBook Air (M3) |
---|---|---|
Geekbench 6 single-core | 2418 | 3082 |
Geekbench 6 multi-core | 14352 | 12087 |
Handbrake (time to transcode a 4K movie to 1080p) | 6:50 | 7:19 |
It’s not the 28% performance increase the company touted, which may come down to the TDP (the total wattage powering the chip) of retail laptops being lower to strike a better balance between performance and battery life, but multicore tasks and rendering processes zip along at a faster pace than you see on the MacBook Air M3.
What does that mean? Photoshop edits are quicker, video transcoding and exports are faster, and multitasking is much better handled than you’ll see elsewhere in the laptop space. All of this happens with your fans barely kicking up a storm too. Thermal management is certainly a lot better here, with temperatures barely hitting what I felt on other Intel or AMD laptops.
Interestingly, some 3D Mark tests rely on x86 architecture, meaning the benchmark has to go through Prism translation. In general use of apps not built for arm, this emulator works just fine, but in the numbers reflected, you’ll notice that the emulation adds another workload on top of X Elite.
Header Cell – Column 0 | Asus Vivobook S 15 (Snapdragon X Elite) | Huawei MateBook X Pro (Intel Core Ultra 9) |
---|---|---|
3DMark Time Spy | 2568 | 4048 |
3DMark Fire Strike | 5061 | 8708 |
3DMark Night Raid | 26284 | 29550 |
For games that work on Windows on Arm, you’re getting a surprisingly good experience on those Adreno-integrated graphics. Baldur’s Gate 3 looks good and runs locked at a respectable 30 FPS, while Devil May Cry 5 (provided you turn down some of the effects and texture details to a mix of Medium/Low) is capable of chugging along at a full 60 FPS.
When it comes to integrated graphics, Qualcomm stands head and shoulders above for a quick gaming foray without the horsepower of a discrete GPU. Intel Lunar Lake and AMD Ryzen AI 300 chipsets have a mountain to climb to come close to the power efficiency here.
It lasts longer than a MacBook
In reality, the MacBook Air has been beaten before. Some Intel Core Ultra 9 setups, such as the one found in the Huawei MateBook X Pro, have managed a faster multi-core score, but that has come at the sheer expense of battery life.
Here, however, with a mobile-first chip setup, the Vivobook S 15 faced up to the might of the MacBook (in my own experience). Of course, once again, this is just a reflection of my own use.
I’ll go into more detail soon, but to summarize, a full day of work involving plenty of Photoshop usage, 20+ Chrome tabs, music playing in the background, and following up with an evening of binge-watching Bridgerton with the Mrs on Netflix while sneakily watching the Euros in the background (don’t tell her I do this) saw the battery percentage go down from 100 to 47 over a 12-hour time span.
This, to me, is worry-free battery life territory. It’s a rare feat that only Apple laptops have enjoyed. But now, Asus is joining the party too.
Let’s not forget everything else
Of course, there’s a whole laptop here too, and the rest of the package is pretty tasty too. That 16:9 OLED panel is super vivid with a nice 3K crispiness and a smooth framerate. Pair that with the four-speaker harman/kardon array with Dolby Atmos — packing a nice detailed soundstage that has a sneaky slither of bassy warmth — and you’ve got a lovely notebook to work on by day and binge watch by night.
The keyboard has a nice tactile feel that means you can type away to your heart’s content without any discomfort you’d expect from low profile laptop keyboards, and the touchpad is massive, responsive and snappy on the clicks.
And some of the additional AI-driven features on hand here make for some really nice user-friendliness. Presence monitoring goes beyond just going to sleep when you walk away, as it can even dim the display to preserve battery life based on you making eye contact with it.
Windows studio effects feel far more accurate to use and start up a whole lot faster, and that NPU is being used in more places across third party apps than you may think — offloading intensive processes and easing that CPU load to keep up that longevity.
It’s not just a new chip for the sake of a new chip. Microsoft’s really thought about where it applies.
Asus Vivobook S 15: What I didn’t like
There are a couple of frustrations with the S 15 specifically, along with one bugbear that will fade into the background in your time using it.
It’s a bit pedestrian, isn’t it?
Let me be clear. This is not about the build quality. This aluminum construction feels nice and premium while keeping things lightweight and thin. But this is almost aesthetically utilitarian to a fault. What I mean by that is there aren’t any unique qualities to its frame or design details to match the Snapdragon X Elite occasion here.
I’m not looking for any over-the-top RGB flashiness or daring stylings that may ultimately make you feel embarrassed to show this notebook in public. But gazing your eyes upon this machine gives you more “family laptop” vibes over something you can really get stuff done on. Some people will find this understated design cool, but I wanted something a bit more individual for this first foray into Arm.
Also, can we please stop using MicroSD? This is a *checks notes* 15-inch laptop — you have space for a full-size SD card reader!
You’ll be waiting a while to get everything
This is in reference to two different areas. First, as you may have probably read, Recall — the headline Copilot+ PC feature — is being delayed because of its big security concerns. This means a more gradual rollout of things that will really take this category of laptop into its own space.
And secondly, while the Prism emulation layer is mostly reliable, there’s some hokeyness with certain apps built for Intel or AMD chips. Given the huge and varied ecosystem, this transition period will probably take longer than it did during Cupertino’s shift from Intel to Apple Silicon. But fortunately, the most-used apps are already Arm-enabled.
There will just be some moments of frustration during this teething period.
Asus Vivobook S 15: Early verdict
And that’s the story of the Asus Vivobook S 15 — an low key legendary laptop that puts Microsoft on a new path to truly take on the mighty MacBook lineage.
Even without every feature promised for these Windows 11 machines touting a big enough NPU, you can feel a marked difference in its performance and longevity. So much so that you’ll feel that battery life anxiety fade away.
Of course, we’ll wait for the official benchmark results from our lab and the full suite of Copilot+ PC features to give it a score. But all signs point to this being a milestone. This is the start of something big.