Skip to main content

The most powerful Surface laptop ever may launch later this year

A side view of the Surface Laptop Studio.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Microsoft’s Surface line has become iconic in a few different ways, but performance was never its strong suit. However, according to rumors that have been building throughout this year, we’ll be getting the most powerful Surface device we’ve ever seen later this year.

The product in question is the Surface Laptop Studio 2, a follow-up to the debut of the design in 2021. That initial Surface Laptop Studio was already the most powerful device in the lineup as the replacement of the previous Surface Book designs. Most importantly, these are the only Surface devices to get discrete graphics, making them the best options for creatives and gamers. Of course, that device was unique for its form factor — but performance was a big selling point too.

Recommended Videos

Two years later, though, reports show that we’re getting a sequel to the Surface Laptop Studio that could increase performance in three important ways.

First off, the Surface Laptop Studio 2 is rumored to get the bump to Nvidia’s RTX 40-series graphics. A leaked Geekbench run was posted on Twitter earlier this year that showed a configuration with the RTX 4060, which likely represents the most powerful option available. The generational bump will be significant, but beyond that, the Surface Laptop Studio was limited to just the RTX 3050 Ti, never offering an RTX 3060. The RTX 40-series also comes with DLSS 3 and Frame Generation, which boosts frame rates further in games that support it.

Secondly, the Surface Laptop Studio 2 may finally provide a more powerful processor. One of the major hang-ups with the Surface Laptop Studio was its use of a 35-watt processor, the Intel Core i7-11370H. Now, that same Geekbench leak shows the Surface Laptop Studio 2 will use the Core i7-13800H. Not only is this a proper 45-watt part like the ones featured in competitive systems, but it also has 14 cores, split between six Performance cores and eight Efficiency cores. That’ll be a huge jump in performance over the quad-core part used in the original laptop. It’ll also provide an even larger performance delta between this and the Surface Laptop 5 (or Surface Laptop 6, for that matter).

The Surface Laptop Studio in Stage Mode.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Lastly, the Surface Laptop Studio 2 may also get support for higher memory capacity than we’ve seen before. The previous model capped out at 32GB, but this new model may get 64GB. Again, this makes it more competitive with similar laptops from other manufacturers and expands its possible demographic to those who could actually put this much RAM to use. It should be noted that the 14-inch MacBook Pro offers up to 96GB, though that’s hardly the standard.

Microsoft holds an annual Surface hardware launch each fall, and the Surface Laptop Studio 2 is expected to make an appearance there, along with a new Surface Pro, Surface Laptop, and more. Zac Bowden of Windows Central reportedly confirmed with sources that the Surface Laptop Studio 2 has been code-named internally as “Ersa” and will, indeed, be announced later this year.

I, for one, am excited that Microsoft is continuing the Surface Laptop Studio line and not delaying it further. I love the design, the multiple modes of use, and the gorgeous screen. I was worried after an update was skipped in 2022, but this more powerful model might be exactly what I’ve been waiting for.

Luke Larsen
Luke Larsen is the Senior Editor of Computing, managing all content covering laptops, monitors, PC hardware, Macs, and more.
Musk promises to deliver ‘the world’s most powerful AI’ by later this year
Elon Musk stands looking to his right.

Tesla CEO and Twitter/X owner Elon Musk announced Monday that his AI startups, xAI, had officially begun training its Memphis supercomputer, what he describes as “the most powerful AI training cluster in the world."

Once fully operational, Musk plans to use it to build "world’s most powerful AI by every metric by December of this year,” which presumably will be Grok 3.

Read more
A new Windows alternative could launch on PCs later this year
Huawei Matebook X Pro

After a rough few years in the U.S., Huawei has turned to developing its own operating system for PCs -- and it may finally be arriving later this year.

HarmonyOS, as it's called, has already been in use on smart devices like Huawei wearables and smartphones, but now a version of it may finally land on PCs in the form of HarmonyOS Next.

Read more
It only took 41 years, but Notepad just got its most important update ever
The Notepad app on Windows 11.

After 41 years of being part of Windows, Notepad has finally been updated by Microsoft with two essential features: autocorrect and spellcheck. Given how prevalent spellcheck is across any app where you can enter text, you could be forgiven for thinking that Notepad already had the feature, but it was just added to the app available in Windows 11.

Microsoft originally announced the addition in March, and it began rolling out spellcheck in Notepad to Windows Insiders the following month. Over the past few days, the wider Windows 11 install base has received the update. You probably never noticed it -- I checked out Notepad on my PC and saw spellcheck was enabled, and I haven't seen a peep from Windows Update.

Read more