HomeComputersLaptopsAsus Zenbook Duo (2026) Review: The Dual-Screen Laptop Finally Gets It Right

Asus Zenbook Duo (2026) Review: The Dual-Screen Laptop Finally Gets It Right

Intel's Latest chip and a redesigned hinge make Asus's wild two-screen concept feel completely grown up

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The Asus Zenbook Duo 2026 is, without question, the most interesting laptop money can buy right now. Not the fastest. Not the thinnest. But the most interesting? Absolutely. It arrives packing Intel’s brand new Core Ultra 7 388H Panther Lake processor, a redesigned hinge that shrinks the gap between its two OLED screens by a dramatic 70%, and battery life so absurd it almost reads like a typo. If you’ve been watching the dual-screen laptop space and wondering when someone would finally nail it, the wait is pretty much over.

Design

The concept works the same way it always has. Two 14-inch OLED touchscreens are joined by a hinge, a detachable physical keyboard sits flat on the lower screen, and the whole thing looks like a regular laptop when closed. Flip it open, and you get two stacked vertical screens. Remove the keyboard and lay it flat, and you get a wide horizontal dual-display setup that’s genuinely unlike anything else on the market.

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The big news here is the “Hideaway Hinge.” Asus has recessed most of the hinge mechanism inside the chassis, cutting the gap between screens from 25.3mm down to just 7.6mm. That matters more than the numbers suggest. The old gap was constantly breaking the illusion of a single large workspace. Now, with the seam nearly invisible, the dual-screen experience finally feels cohesive rather than cobbled together.

The body uses Ceraluminium, which is Asus shorthand for an aluminium chassis with a ceramic-style coating. It’s tough, looks sharp, and the dark grey finish is quietly premium. Weighing between 1.35kg and 1.65kg, it’s chunky by ultrabook standards, but the Zenbook Duo is not pretending to be one. The detachable keyboard has improved battery life of 11 to 52 hours depending on backlight use, travel of 1.7mm that types better than it has any right to, and a magnetic switching mechanism between wired and wireless modes that works so seamlessly you’ll never think about it.

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Connectivity is the one area the design forces some compromise. Two Thunderbolt 4/USB-C ports, one USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A, and HDMI 2.1 is functional, but when the screens are flat in horizontal mode, the HDMI and one Thunderbolt 4 port become inaccessible. Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4 cover the wireless side competently.

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Display

Both screens are exceptional, and the fact that they’re so closely matched to each other deserves a specific callout. Each panel runs at 2880 x 1800 resolution with refresh rates up to 144Hz and SDR brightness peaking at 489.2 cd/m2. Color accuracy in Natural mode returns a Delta-E of just 0.62. Coverage figures are strong across the board: 100% sRGB, 90% Adobe RGB, and 100% DCI-P3.

What really impresses is that the bottom panel matches the top within 1 to 2 percentage points across colorimeter tests. That consistency is hard to achieve and sells the illusion of a single large canvas rather than two displays awkwardly bolted together.

Performance

This is where the 2026 Zenbook Duo separates itself from its predecessors, convincingly. The Core Ultra 7 388H blends the single-core efficiency of Lunar Lake with meaningfully stronger multi-core output. Geekbench 6 scores of 2710 (single-core) and 14,670 (multi-core) are seriously impressive for a non-workstation laptop.

The integrated Intel Arc GPU with 12 Xe3 cores is a genuine step forward for integrated graphics. A Geekbench 6 OpenCL score of 52,919 leaves Lunar Lake and Snapdragon X behind by a fair margin, and the GPU can run Doom: The Dark Ages at 45+fps on Medium at 1080p. For integrated graphics, that’s remarkable. Storage is handled by a 1TB PCIe 5.0 SSD.

Asus Pen 3.0 is also part of the package, and it works really well.

Then there’s the battery. The 99Wh cell survived 21 hours and 15 minutes in a single-screen HD video rundown test. Both screens active brought that down to 12 hours and 21 minutes, which is still more than enough for most full working days. A 65W charger brings it back to 43% charge in 30 minutes. One genuine weak link is the 1080p webcam, which is merely adequate in good light and noticeably soft and blotchy in anything less. For a laptop at this price, that’s a miss.

Asus Zenbook Duo (2026) Review webcam

Verdict

Starting at Rs 2,99,990, the Zenbook Duo asks serious money. If you work from a fixed desk with a monitor, there are better-value options available elsewhere.

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But if you move around constantly and need genuine dual-screen real estate wherever you land, nothing else comes close. The narrowed hinge gap, the Panther Lake processor, the extraordinary battery life, and two individually stunning OLED panels combine to make the dual-screen laptop concept feel more finished and more practical than at any point in its short history.

And yes, you do get a carrying sleeve also in the box.

You can buy Asus Zenbook Duo 2026 from here

Pros

  • Two superb, closely matched OLED displays with excellent color accuracy
  • Strong CPU performance that punches above its class
  • Extraordinary battery life, particularly in single-screen use
  • Redesigned hinge dramatically reduces the gap between screens
  • Very fast PCIe SSD storage

Cons

  • Expensive starting price
  • Some ports are inaccessible in horizontal mode
  • Webcam quality lags a little
  • Thick and heavy compared to traditional ultrabooks

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Aasthaa Bhandari
Aasthaa Bhandarihttps://www.gadgetbridge.com/
Aasthaa is the youngest member of team Gadget Bridge. Straight out of college she wished to be a journalist and with a passion for gadgets became the youngest correspondent to cover gadget news and reviews here.
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