Qualcomm Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme Review: New ASUS And HP Laptops Tested

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To evaluate the Snapdragon X2 Elite's real-world capabilities, we ran a mix of browser, productivity, content creation, and AI workloads, as well as some graphics and battery benchmarks. For this most recent round of refreshed mobile platform reviews, our team rounded-up an array of systems we had on-hand, reset and refreshed all of them, and fully updated the systems with the latest UEFIs, firmware, and Windows Updates. We then ran all of the latest versions of each of the benchmarks to gather fresh performance data to build upon for future reviews and analysis.

Speedometer 3.1 Web Application Performance

We use BrowserBench.org's Speedometer test to take a holistic look at web application performance. This test automatically loads and runs a variety of sample web apps using the most popular web development frameworks around, including React, Angular, Ember.js, and even simple JavaScript. This test is an example of how systems cope with real-world, modern web apps. All tests were performed using the latest version of Chrome.

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The Asus and HP Snapdragon X2 Elite-powered systems outpaced all of the other thin and light laptops we tested here--only a more powerful gaming laptop with a discrete GPU was faster, when on AC power. We also ran this test when on battery power.

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When running on battery power, all of the systems bleed off some performance, but the Intel and AMD powered systems take a much bigger hit. Here, the two Asus and HP Snapdragon X2 Elite-powered systems take the top spots.

MAXON Cinebench 2026 3D Rendering Benchmarks

Next up is the latest-generation 3D rendering benchmark from Maxon, based on the Cinema 4D rendering engine. It's a purely CPU-based test that doesn't make use of the graphics processor or NPU, and it scales very well with additional CPU cores. We ran both single- and multi-threaded tests on all of the machines in the charts.

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The Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme-powered Asus Zenbook A16 put up some big numbers in Cinebench 2026. The Asus machine had the best singe-core score of the bunch and its multi-thread score crushed all of the thin and light laptops and even beat Strix Halo. Only the higher-power gaming laptop put up a higher multi-thread score. The HP Elitebook X G2q also put up a strong multi-thread score, that landed just behind Intel's top-end Panther Lake chip.

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When running on battery power, however, the Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme-powered Asus Zenbook A16 takes the overall lead. The HP Elitebook X G2q with the standard Snapdragon X2 Elite drops down a couple of rungs on battery power, but keep in mind it is still a prototype and there is additional tuning to be done.

Geekbench v6.5 CPU Benchmark

The Geekbench CPU tests stress only the processor cores in a system (not the graphics card/GPU), with both single and multi-threaded workloads. The tests are comprised of encryption processing, image compression, HTML5 parsing, physics calculations and other general purpose compute processing workloads.

geekbench snapdragon x2 elite benchmarks

The Asus and HP Snapdragon X2 Elite-powered systems also performed extremely well in Geekbench. The Asus Zenbook A16 once again lands on the top spot, offering the best single and multi-thread scores of the group. The HP Elitebook X G2q also performs very well, trailing only the gaming laptop and Strix Halo halo systems. The HP system's singe-thread score, however, was second best overall.

Geekbench AI Machine Learning Benchmarks

The Geekbench AI benchmark provides a straightforward look at how well a device handles a variety of AI-assisted tasks. This quick and easy test gives you a numerical snapshot of a CPU, GPU, or NPU's ability to power through real-world machine learning workloads, factoring in both speed and accuracy. The higher the score, the better the device's AI chops, whether it's image recognition, object detection, or natural language processing.

Results are presented for three levels of numerical precision: single precision or FP32, half precision or FP16, and quantized or INT8. All results that the benchmark provides are geomean scores from multiple runs of each test workload. We've got CPU and NPU scores for you here.

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The Snapdragon X2 Elite didn't fare particularly well in Geekbench AI's CPU benchmark. It was significantly faster than the original Snapdragon X Elite, but Intel and AMD have done much more optimization work for their CPU cores with this benchmark. Things look very different when testing NPUs with this benchmark, however.

gai npu2 snapdragon x2 elite benchmarks

The Snapdragon X2 Elite's single precision performance trails the other NPUs in this test, but its half precision score lands just behind Intel's Panther Lake. In the quantized test though, Qualcomm's 80 TOPs NPU decimated the Core Ultra X9 Panther Lake processor, when both are using their preferred frameworks and backends.

Microsoft Office Performance With PCMark Applications

The PCMark 10 Applications benchmark measures performance in the Microsoft Office suite, as well as in the Edge browser, offering native instruction set-compatible versions of the apps for optimal performance across a wide variety of workloads in tools office workers, students and home users utilize every day. The following results should show a view of performance with a best foot forward from all systems tested.

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The PCMark 10 Applications benchmark, which leverages actual Microsoft Office applications, had the Asus and HP Snapdragon X2 Elite-powered systems landing in the lower half of results, but right in the mix with some of the better Intel Core Ultra Series 3 and AMD Ryzen AI-based systems. Rest assured, all of the systems we tested here are more than powerful enough for everyday, office-type productivity workloads. 

Puget Bench For Creators: Davinci Resolve

Next up we have some video editing and encoding using the Puget Bench for Creators and Davinci Resolve. Puget Systems has been developing benchmarks that leverage real-world applications and workloads for a number of years now, which are highly regarded by creators using popular Adobe applications and Davinci Resolve. Here, we used the free version of Davinci Resolve (not the Studio edition) that features less hardware acceleration and relies heavily on CPU, GPU and memory performance.

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Puget Bench with Davinci Resolve had the Asus and HP Snapdragon X2 Elite-powered systems performing relatively well. The top-end Asus Zenbook A16 with the Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme processor, trailed only the more expensive Strix Halo system and top-end Intel Core Ultra X9 with Arc B390 graphics. The Asus machine, however, outpaced the XPS 14, with its scaled back Core Ultra X7. The HP Elitebook X G2q finished slightly ahead of the mainstream Panther Lake Core Ultra 7 355 as well.

UL 3DMark Gaming And Graphics Benchmarks

3DMark has a wide variety of graphics and gaming related tests available. In these tests, we chose to run 3DMark CPU Profile benchmark, which runs through an array of physics calculations with a varying number of threads, and Steel Nomad Lite, a modern DirectX 12 test specifically designed for lower-power GPUs and integrated graphics.

3dmark cpu snapdragon x2 elite benchmarks

The Asus and HP Snapdragon X2 Elite-powered systems finished right in the middle of the pack according to 3DMark's CPU performance profiler. We didn't expect much here, because Qualcomm isn't targeting gamers with these processors, but they still managed to outpace Intel's and AMD's more mainstream mobile processors at the higher thread counts. With the lower thread counts, Qualcomm trails, however.

3dmark2 cpu snapdragon x2 elite benchmarks

The Asus and HP Snapdragon X2 Elite-powered systems offered particular strong graphics performance in 3DMark's Steel Nomad Lite test. Here, the Asus and HP systems sandwiched the Dell XPS 14 with 12Xe Arc B390 graphics. The larger Lenovo system with the top-end Core Ultra X9 and Arc B390 pulls ahead, but that system has one of the fastest iGPUs in a thin and light notebook if we disregard the more expensive Strix Halo platform for a moment. Qualcomm may not lead here, but make no mistake, these are some great scores from Qualcomm's Adreno X2-90 GPU.

F1 22 Formula 1 Racing Game Benchmark

Racing simulator F1 2022 is a DirectX 12 game title that is sensitive to certain system configurations, and as such, is useful for teasing out certain performance anomalies. We tested the game in its High graphics preset, with upscaling disabled, and at 1080p resolution.

f122 a snapdragon x2 elite benchmarks

It seems HP still has some optimization work to do with the Elitebook X G2q; it's minimum FPS was much better than the previous-gen snapdragons, but average FPS was only about 8% higher. The Asus Zenbook A16, however, lands near the top of the charts, besting all of the other integrated GPUs besides Intel's powerful 12Xe Arc B390 in the top-end Core Ultra X9 388H.

We should note that we tried an array of newer titles and ran into some compatibility issues with EA's anti-cheat (in the newer F1 titles) and with Unreal Engine (Talos Principle), hence going back to F1 22 here. Still, between 3DMark and this game, it's clear Qualcomm has made some great strides in terms of GPU performance. Now it's a matter of getting the PC gaming ecosystem on-board with the rest of the software stack.

Battery Life With The Snapdragon X2 Elite

Battery life is critically important for a business PC. Working on the go could mean long stretches away from outlets. The machine needs to last through endless hours of work that could mean e-mails and time spent poring over spreadsheets, not to mention long runs of content consumption like Netflix binging.

Here we've calibrated the laptop displays to a similar fixed brightness, in an effort to minimize that aspect of power draw, though lots of other variables come into play, like battery capacity, for example.

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The Asus and HP Snapdragon X2 Elite-powered systems offered very good, but unexceptional battery life. We're not going to dwell on the HP system at all, since it is still a prototype. The Asus Zenbook A16, despite having the more powerful processor and a larger display, finished much better and ran untethered for nearly 20 hours with its display lit the entire time. That was better than the Dell XPS 14 with Panther Lake, a smaller display, and a similar sized battery, but not as long as some other machine with much bigger batteries.

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In terms of power efficiency, as defined by minutes per watt-hour, the Asus Zenbook A16 fares pretty well and outpaces the top-end Intel and AMD-based systems. Only the more mainstream laptops, with smaller, lower resolution displays finished higher.

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Qualcomm Snapdragon X2 Elite Performance: Conclusion

The Windows laptop landscape is very different today than it was when the original Snapdragon X Elite launched nearly two years ago. Microsoft’s been adding features, optimizing performance, and improving its Prism emulation with Windows 11 on Snapdragon and Arm device, Intel, AMD and Apple have all launched multiple new mobile processors, and many more ISVs have released Arm-native versions of their applications. Qualcomm has also taken what it’s learned since launching the original Snapdragon X Elite and poured that knowledge and significant effort into enhancing the new Snapdragon X2 Elite in virtually every way versus its predecessor. Qualcomm claimed the Snapdragon X2 Elite was faster and more efficient than the original and the company has delivered. 

The Snapdragon X2 Elite offers class-leading single and multi-thread performance in some tests, best-in-class NPU performance, and a huge leap in graphics performance as well. Battery life with the particular machines we tested didn’t match some previous-gen systems, but keep in mind the Snapdragon X2 Elite and Elite Extreme have more cores and offers significantly higher performance; in some tests the Snapdragon X2 Elite was nearly 2x faster than its predecessor, while still offering strong battery life.

asus zenbook a16 snapdragon x2 lid
Find The ASUS Zenbook A16 @ Best Buy

Qualcomm’s clearly got an excellent performing mobile PC platform in its portfolio with the Snapdragon X2 Elite. It is, however, facing much stiffer competition today. Qualcomm disrupted the Windows laptop market with the Snapdragon X Elite and since the original’s launch, just about everyone in the space has worked to improve the performance and efficiency of their platforms. Qualcomm’s entrance into the space introduced some fresh competition and ultimately lifted much of the mobile PC market; the systems you can buy today offer much better experiences than before.

If you’re going to be shopping for a new laptop or notebook soon, it’s definitely worth checking out systems built around the Snapdragon X2 Elite. The ASUS Zenbook A16 featured here is going on sale today for $1599 (Best Buy), but many more machines from a multitude of OEMs and ODMs are inbound as well. Stay tuned to HotHardware for reviews of those systems as they arrive.

Marco Chiappetta

Marco Chiappetta

Marco's interest in computing and technology dates all the way back to his early childhood. Even before being exposed to the Commodore P.E.T. and later the Commodore 64 in the early ‘80s, he was interested in electricity and electronics, and he still has the modded AFX cars and shop-worn soldering irons to prove it. Once he got his hands on his own Commodore 64, however, computing became Marco's passion. Throughout his academic and professional lives, Marco has worked with virtually every major platform from the TRS-80 and Amiga, to today's high end, multi-core servers. Over the years, he has worked in many fields related to technology and computing, including system design, assembly and sales, professional quality assurance testing, and technical writing. In addition to being the Managing Editor here at HotHardware for close to 15 years, Marco is also a freelance writer whose work has been published in a number of PC and technology related print publications and he is a regular fixture on HotHardware’s own Two and a Half Geeks webcast. - Contact: marco(at)hothardware(dot)com

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