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Your Zenbook A16 gets an 18-core Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme

ASUS says its lightest 16-inch Zenbook pairs a flagship-class Qualcomm chip with an 80 TOPS NPU, targeting people who multitask, create, or just want a faster unplugged Windows laptop.

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ASUS is pushing into the big-screen ultralight space with the Zenbook A16 Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme, a 16-inch Copilot+ PC that it says weighs 1.2 kg. The hook is simple. You get a roomy display, but you don’t have to carry a typical 16-inch workload on your shoulder.

The headline spec is Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme with an 18-core CPU, paired with an 80 TOPS NPU for on-device AI acceleration. If you’ve been waiting for Windows laptops that feel quick on battery while still taking AI features seriously, this is the kind of configuration that’s meant to close that gap.

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ASUS is rounding it out with a 16-inch 3K OLED panel that runs at 120 Hz, plus a six-speaker setup. It’s also claiming 21 plus hours of battery life. What we still don’t have is the stuff that decides whether this lands as a smart buy, including price, exact on-sale timing, and which regions get which configurations.

Flagship silicon meets 1.2 kg

A thin, light 16-inch laptop can look great on a spec sheet, then fall apart when it has to stay fast for more than a few minutes. The big question for the Zenbook A16 Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme is sustained performance, meaning heat, fan behavior, and whether that 18-core chip can keep its pace under real work.

The 80 TOPS NPU is the other part to watch. It suggests this machine is built for local AI tasks rather than leaning on the cloud for everything, which could matter more as Windows experiences and creative apps keep adding NPU-aware features.

A screen and audio combo that matters

The display is doing a lot of the lifestyle work here. A 3K OLED panel should deliver strong contrast for movies and late-night reading, and 120 Hz can make everyday motion feel smoother than the standard 60 Hz experience.

Then there’s the six-speaker setup, a detail that usually shows up on laptops meant to be your main screen at home, not just a travel companion. If ASUS nails tuning and volume, this could be a rare large-screen laptop that feels fun outside of work.

What to wait for next

Before anyone should get attached, we need the missing basics. Price and availability will decide how competitive this is, and regional configurations will decide whether you can actually buy the exact Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme version being teased.

If you’re interested, keep an eye on early testing focused on battery life and sustained speed. Those two results will tell you whether this is a true all-day, big-screen carry, or just an ambitious spec list.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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