Verdict
The Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) is a unique gaming laptop that brings immense power to the dual-screen form factor. It’s got two fantastic OLED screens, potent internals and surprisingly excellent battery life, although you will pay quite the fortune for the privilege.
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Innovative form factor
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Dazzling pair of OLED screens
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Surprisingly excellent endurance
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Not quite as powerful as other RTX 5090-powered laptops
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Horrendously expensive
Key Features
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Review Price:
£5799.99
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RTX 5090 inside
This top-spec variant of the ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) has Nvidia’s top-class laptop GPU inside for some very strong gaming performance.
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16-inch 3K 120Hz OLED screens
This Asus laptop also has a pair of large OLED screens with strong detail and higher refresh rate for smooth motion.
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90Whr battery
The ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) also has a hefty capacity battery inside in the hope of powering its beefy components for a reasonable amount of time.
Introduction
The Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) brings together a combination of immense power and versatility in an intriguing chassis.
It sees Asus revive the ROG Zephyrus Duo moniker for the first time since it adjusted the form factor to a potent ultrabook with two stacked screens. And, naturally, it doesn’t do things by halves, packing in an Intel Core Ultra 9 386H processor, an RTX 5090 GPU, 64GB of RAM, and a 2TB SSD. For good measure, you’ll also find a pair of 16-inch 3K 120Hz OLED screens and a hefty 90Whr battery.
All of this means it’s quite the expensive option at £5799.99/$5500, making it significantly more expensive than the standard Asus Zenbook Duo (2026), while being similar in outlay to the Acer Predator Helios 18 AI (2025) and Alienware 18 Area-51 (2025) as an ultra-premium gaming powerhouse.
I’ve been putting the ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) through its paces for the last couple of weeks to see if it’s one of the best gaming laptops we’ve tested.
Design and Keyboard
- Bigger than the original Zenbook Duo by some margin
- Vast port selection and versatile chassis
- Snappy keyboard and solid trackpad
I don’t know what I was really expecting from the design of the ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026), but it is essentially a bulkier version of the standard Zenbook Duo (2026), owing to its RTX 5090, a bigger battery, and the associated cooling inside.
This means it tips the scales at 2.82kg, which to be honest, isn’t unreasonable for such a beefy, large-screened gaming laptop that, let’s not forget, is carrying two OLED screens around. Granted, it’s some 1.2kg heavier than the standard Zenbook Duo (2026), but it is more powerful and just bigger in general.

The form factor of the ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) hasn’t changed, with the same flexibility that’s characterised this range of laptops. It can be used as a conventional laptop with a keyboard attachment covering the bottom screen, plus with both screens in play, with the laptop elevated on its kickstand and the keyboard kept separate.
For vertical working, you can turn the laptop on its side so it resembles more of a book-style foldable phone rather than a laptop with the keyboard in tow via Bluetooth.
The port selection here is a little different, with the left side housing a beefy DC jack for power, an HDMI port, a USB-A and a Thunderbolt 4-capable USB-C port. The right side has a further Thunderbolt 4-capable USB-C port, another USB-A port, and a full-size MicroSD card reader, plus a power button.

The ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026)’s keyboard has also been redesigned and can attach to the laptop’s chassis via Bluetooth (when detached and used with the laptop’s two screens), retractable pogo pins, and even USB-C. It has its own USB-C port on the left side, too.
It’s a comfortable keyboard with a smaller form factor, and Asus has bundled a slick trackpad that’s lovely to use. But as much as this has been redesigned compared to older models, the keyboard attachment still feels a smidgen too flimsy for my liking.
You can also use an on-screen keyboard and trackpad on the bottom screen by tapping six fingers on the screen. While it’s helpful to have, you don’t get anywhere near as much tactility or feeling as with an actual keyboard. I can see it being useful if you’re in a pinch, but the physical keyboard and trackpad are much more responsive.
The packaging here seems to be entirely plastic-free, with the laptop coming in a cardboard box and paper bag, along with the cable and power brick.
Display and Sound
- Bright and sharp Lumina Pro OLED screens
- Deep blacks and fantastic contrast
- Surprisingly capable speakers
This ROG variant features a pair of Asus ROG Nebula HDR OLED screens, each a 16-inch 3K (2880×1800) panel with a 120Hz refresh rate.
The panels are both touchscreens and feel responsive in use, even without a stylus – they accept inputs from Asus’ stylus without a hitch, though. Plus, with a 16:10 aspect ratio, there’s an extra bit of vertical real estate that makes sense for modern workloads, and it’s possible to unfold the laptop and have the output appear on both screens, which is ideal for collaborative work.

As expected from an OLED screen, these panels have exemplary colour accuracy, with perfect coverage of both the mainstream sRGB and creative DCI-P3 gamuts, while Adobe RGB coverage at 92% is also excellent.
These screens are also rather vivid, with up to 1100 nits of peak HDR brightness and VESA DisplayHDR True Black 1000 support. My colorimeter measured 458.2 nits of peak SDR brightness, which is around 25% brighter than the peak of the panel on last year’s Zenbook Duo model.

In addition, there are deep blacks and gorgeous contrast on both panels, with a measured 0.03 and 10890:1 respectively. The 6500K colour temperature is perfect, too.
The ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) has a new six-speaker array that projects sound outwards from the sides of the laptop. As a result, they’re best heard with the laptop propped up on its kickstand, and audio is decently clear with good depth to it. There’s even spatial audio support with Dolby Atmos.
Performance
- Core Ultra 3 386H is a beefy processor
- RTX 5090 isn’t as powerful as in rival laptops
- Fast and capacious RAM and SSD combo
The ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) has seen a move to a run of new processor options, with my sample shipping with the most powerful Intel chip this laptop can be specced with – the Core Ultra 9 386H.
The Core Ultra 9 386H is technically an Intel Panther Lake processor, although it isn’t one of the top-end X-prefixed chips that benefit from the new B390 iGPU. It’s nonetheless a potent chip that appears to be the successor to the Core Ultra 9 285H I tested in a range of 2025 laptops with 16 cores, 16 threads, and a boost clock of up to 4.9GHz.
In running the ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) through the Geekbench 6 and Cinebench R23 benchmark tests, there’s a marginal improvement in single- and multi-threaded performance over the Core Ultra 9 285H in laptops such as the MSI Prestige 16 AI Evo (2025). Multi-threaded performance is also stronger than the new Gorgon Point APU inside the likes of the Asus Zenbook S 16 (2026), owing to a greater number of cores on Intel’s part.

It’s usually at this point where I’d witter on about the improved powers of Intel’s Panther Lake iGPU, but with this Asus laptop, it’s been kitted out with an Nvidia RTX 5090 laptop GPU that, on paper, makes this one of the beefiest gaming laptops you can buy.
In terms of gaming benchmark numbers, the ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) is decently strong. At 1080p, we saw 110.10fps in Cyberpunk 2077 and 124fps in Returnal, while the 196fps in Rainbow Six Extraction is enough to more than max out the 144Hz refresh rate of the display.
In going up to 1440p, we’re seeing 73.45fps in Cyberpunk 2077 and 95fps in Returnal. Rainbow Six Extraction dropped down to 133fps, for reference.

The numbers here are strong, but they’re some way behind the other RTX 5090-powered gaming laptops I’ve looked at. I had a similar revelation with the Asus ROG Zephyrus G16 (2025). It’s potentially the fact that the Core Ultra 9 386H CPU isn’t as fast as the 275HX chip inside competitor laptops that is contributing to much lower frame rates than key rivals. It is also a lower-TGP variant of the 5090, with 150W compared to the 175W you’ll find in comparable options from Acer and Medion.
Adding ray-tracing into the equation did hamstring results a little, dropping Cyberpunk 2077 down to just 24.40fps at its native 2880x1800resolution, while at 1080p, it sat at 47.46fps.
The new DLSS Transformer model pushed these results up to 45.68fps and 72.51fps, respectively, with much stronger performance thanks to DLSS4 and the new Transformer model, which does a better job of preserving detail and removing unwanted artefacts compared to the older CNN version.

Being a 50-series laptop also means this ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) can benefit from Nvidia’s clever multi-frame-gen tech with the 5090 that’s present. With this, it adds up to three ‘fake frames’ for every ‘real’ frame rendered to increase your FPS to play well with high-refresh-rate screens. The results rely on a high enough base frame rate to prevent displayed images from being choppy or experiencing high latency.
For ray-traced Cyberpunk 2077 at this laptop’s native 2880×1800 resolution and with DLSS Transformer applied with the maximum 4x multiplier, it was able to get up to 142.38fps, while at 1080p, it went as high as 234.67fps.
The ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) comes with either a 32GB/1TB RAM and storage combo, or a 64GB/2TB option, which is what I was sent. The 2TB SSD here is generous in both capacity and speed as a Gen 5 drive, with reads and writes of 14,090.06 MB/s and 10,662.76 MB/s, respectively.
Software
- Clean Windows 11 install
- Useful pre-installed Asus apps
- Copilot+ PC powers are here
Software-wise, Asus hasn’t splurged too much of its own stuff on the ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026), with this laptop coming with quite a clean Windows 11 install.
There is MyAsus, the brand’s catch-all system app for controlling features such as different power modes and audio settings, and Armoury Crate, Asus’ software for controlling more advanced features such as the LED lid lighting and GPU performance.
This laptop also seems to have enough AI horsepower to be considered a Copilot+ PC, giving you the benefits Microsoft includes, such as generative AI in the Paint and Photos apps, as well as the clever Windows Studio effects for the laptop’s built-in webcam, including background blur, auto framing, and more.
Battery Life
- Lasted for 15 hours 4 minutes in the battery test
- Capable of lasting for one to two working days
Asus has put a hefty 90Whr cell inside the ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026), which is to be expected, given how beefy the internals are, not least with an RTX 5090 and two 14-inch 3K OLED screens to power.
In running the PCMark 10 video loop test at the requisite 150 nits of brightness in the device’s more conventional laptop form factor, it lasted for 15 hours and four minutes. That’s a surprisingly long time in my book, not least for the power on board. For reference, the standard Zenbook Duo (2026) ran for nearly 20 hours in this form factor. It means you’ll easily be able to get one to two working days out of this laptop.

With this being a beefy gaming laptop, the ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) also ships with a hefty 300W power brick that’s brisk in getting go-juice back into the laptop. It took just 27 minutes to get it to half charge and 65 minutes to get back to 100%.
Should you buy it?
You want a beefy dual-screen laptop
The ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) ticks the right boxes if you want a dual-screen laptop with oodles of power for gaming or otherwise.
You want something with more outright grunt
The Core Ultra 9 386H and RTX 5090 combo inside this Asus laptop is strong, although the slender form factor and lower-rated TGP of the internals mean it’s a little way down on power against other RTX 5090 choices in more conventional chassis.
Final Thoughts
The Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) is a unique gaming laptop that brings some immense power to the dual-screen form factor. It’s got two fantastic OLED screens, potent internals and surprisingly excellent battery life, although you will pay quite the fortune for the privilege.
More conventional gaming laptops at this higher price tag, such as the Acer Predator Helios 18 AI (2025) and Alienware 18 Area-51 (2025) are even faster than the ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026), although what they have in grunt, they lack in versatility and battery life in my book.
It depends on what you want to use a laptop with this much oomph for – Asus’ choice is more flexible, but if it’s raw power you want, then the more typical options are beefier and have a better port selection, for instance. For more options, check out our list of the best gaming laptops we’ve tested.
How We Test
This Asus laptop has been put through a series of uniform checks designed to gauge key factors, including build quality, performance, screen quality and battery life.
These include formal synthetic benchmarks and scripted tests, plus a series of real-world checks, such as how well it runs popular apps and a series of standardised game tests that take advantage of the laptop’s internal power.
FAQs
The Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) has a discrete RTX 5090 inside, a stronger port selection, bigger 3K OLED screens, is heavier, but has a slightly smaller battery.
Test Data
| Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) | |
|---|---|
| Cinebench R23 multi core | 20626 |
| Cinebench R23 single core | 2005 |
| Geekbench 6 single core | 2849 |
| Geekbench 6 multi core | 16918 |
| 3DMark Time Spy | 17355 |
| CrystalDiskMark Read speed | 14090.06 MB/s |
| CrystalDiskMark Write Speed | 10662.76 MB/s |
| Brightness (SDR) | 458.2 nits |
| Brightness (HDR) | 1100 nits |
| Black level | 0.03 nits |
| Contrast ratio | 10890 |
| White Visual Colour Temperature | 6500 K |
| sRGB | 100 % |
| Adobe RGB | 92 % |
| DCI-P3 | 100 % |
| PCMark Battery (office) | 15 hrs |
| Battery discharge after 60 minutes of online Netflix playback | 6 % |
| Battery recharge time | 65 mins |
| Cyberpunk 2077 (Quad HD) | 73.55 fps |
| Cyberpunk 2077 (Full HD) | 110.10 fps |
| Cyberpunk 2077 (Full HD + RT) | 47.46 fps |
| Cyberpunk 2077 (Full HD + Supersampling) | 121.73 fps |
| Returnal (Quad HD) | 95 fps |
| Returnal (Full HD) | 124 fps |
| Rainbow Six Extraction (Quad HD) | 133 fps |
| Rainbow Six Extraction (Full HD) | 196 fps |
Full Specs
| Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo (2026) Review | |
|---|---|
| UK RRP | £5799.99 |
| USA RRP | $5500 |
| CPU | Intel Core Ultra 9 386H |
| Manufacturer | Asus |
| Screen Size | 16 inches |
| Storage Capacity | 2TB |
| Front Camera | 1080p webcam |
| Battery | 90 Whr |
| Battery Hours | 15 4 |
| Size (Dimensions) | 355 x 247 x 24.9 MM |
| Weight | 2.82 KG |
| Operating System | Windows 11 |
| Release Date | 2026 |
| First Reviewed Date | 09/07/2026 |
| Resolution | 2880 x 1800 |
| HDR | Yes |
| Refresh Rate | 120 Hz |
| Ports | 1x DC-in jack (for the included 300W/250W power supply) 1x HDMI 2.1 (supports high-resolution/high-refresh-rate displays)1x USB-C with Thunderbolt 4.0 (supports DisplayPort 2.1 and up to 100W Power Delivery)1x USB-A 3.2 Gen 2 1x 3.5mm combo audio jackRight Side:1x USB-A 3.2 Gen 21x USB-C with Thunderbolt 4.0 (supports DisplayPort 2.1 and up to 100W Power Delivery)1x Full-sized SD Card Reader (UHS-II) |
| Audio (Power output) | 60 W |
| GPU | Nvidia RTX 5090 |
| Connectivity | Wifi 7, Bluetooth 5.4 |
| Display Technology | OLED |
| Touch Screen | Yes |
| Convertible? | Yes |


















