Asus ZenBook Pro Duo 15 : Dual Screens, If You Need It

Asus ZenBook Pro Duo 15 OLED review: Dual screens, if you need them

MSRP $3,000.00

“The Asus ZenBook Pro Duo 15 OLED is a fantastic laptop for creators if you can make use of its second screen.”

Pros

  • Useful dual-screen design
  • Excellent build quality
  • Beautiful OLED displays
  • Strong performance in creative apps
  • Keyboard action is comfortable
  • Active pen is precise and responsive

Cons

  • Awkward keyboard and touchpad
  • Battery life is atrocious
  • Expensive

Asus isn’t giving up on dual screens. The company has a few laptops with second screens embedded in the touchpad, but last year it released the more extravagant ZenBook Pro Duo UX581, which positioned a second large display underneath the primary panel. For such a futuristic idea, the laptop was remarkably well-executed.

But Asus hasn’t rested on its laurels, recently releasing the ZenBook Pro Duo 15 OLED UX582, making several significant changes to this experimental design.

I reviewed a well-stocked configuration of the ZenBook Pro Duo with a 10th-gen Intel Core i9-10980HK CPU, 32GB of RAM, a 1TB solid-state drive (SSD), and two displays, a primary 15.6-inch 4K (3840 x 2160) OLED panel and a second OLED screen at 3840 x 1100.

This is an expensive machine at $3,000, though. Is the dual-display functionality enough to go up against the best laptops for video editing and photo editing?

Design

Mark Coppock/Digital Trends

Close the ZenBook Pro Duo’s lid, and it looks like a chunky 15-inch laptop with a slightly industrial design in a Celestial Blue color scheme and the usual Asus concentric swirl on the lid. The edges are angled for aesthetic and functional purposes, particularly the rear edge that accommodates the new ErgoLift AAS (Active Aerodynamic System) hinge that props the lower chassis up for better airflow and more comfortable typing.

There’s a vague resemblance to gaming laptops due to aggressive venting along each side, but overall, the design is more function than form. Looking at the ZenBook Pro Duo gives a distinct impression that this is a working machine. Compare that to the Dell XPS 15, which is far more streamlined and adds a touch of elegance that makes it a more attractive laptop. Another differently designed laptop that also presents a pure work aesthetic is the Acer ConceptD 7 Ezel with its flip-around display design — not surprisingly, that machine is also aimed at creatives.

There’s nothing thin and light about the ZenBook Pro Duo.

Open the ZenBook Pro Duo’s lid and the second display rises at an angle — the previous version remained flat and less comfortable to use. Because both displays are OLED, there’s a ton of bright colors and deep blacks staring back at you, and it looks cool if nothing else. That angle is helpful for more than just east of use; it also provides for additional airflow across the bottom chassis for theoretically improved thermal performance.

The main display hinge is fairly tight, and some pressure is required to lift the second display. You’ll need two hands to open the laptop despite the bottom’s significant weight, but it all feels robust and gives confidence that you won’t have any long-term issues with the second display after many openings and closings.

Asus constructed the ZenBook Pro Duo of a mix of aluminum and magnesium-aluminum alloys, and so the feeling of durability extends to the rest of the laptop. I’d rate it with the best laptops in terms of its rigidity, with absolutely no bending, flexing, or twisting anywhere on the machine. It’s equal to Dell’s XPS and Latitude and Lenovo’s ThinkPad lines, which are among the most robust laptops built today. This quality is a common characteristic of Asus laptops — rarely do we come across one that’s not solid as a rock.

There’s nothing thin and light about the ZenBook Pro Duo, though, but it’s not as large as you might expect given the second screen. It’s .83 inches thick and weighs 5.16 pounds, compared to the XPS 15 at 0.71 inches and 4.5 pounds. The ZenBook’s bezels are larger on the top and bottom, so the chassis is larger overall — not to mention the impact of the second display, but it’s not a huge laptop by any means. The Acer Concept D 7 Ezel is thicker and heavier at 1.13 inches at its thickest point and 5.6 pounds, and that machine feels larger than the ZenBook Pro Duo.

Mark Coppock/Digital Trends

The ZenBook Pro Duo comes with a palm rest extension that slides up against the bottom of the chassis. It makes up for the fact that there’s no palm rest built into the machine, and typing without the extension is uncomfortable (more on the keyboard later). Adding the extension pushes the laptop back on your desk, meaning it takes up quite a bit of space when it’s fully configured. The extension has a passthrough for the LED at the bottom that displays the battery status, which is a nice touch.

There’s no doubt, though, that you’ll be reconfiguring your desk to make everything fit, and the extension is another thing to carry with you when you want to comfortably use the ZenBook Pro Duo on the road. I would have recommended adding a magnetic connection to keep the extension in place; as it is, it slides around while you’re working and that can be distracting.

Finally, Asus also bundles an ErgoLift Stand that further props up the rear of the ZenBook Duo Pro. You can achieve a 12-degree angle by using the stand, which can be adhered to the bottom of the chassis to always keep it with you. I found it a bit clunky to use, but then I didn’t go through attaching the stand to the review unit.

Certainly, it provides a more comfortable angle both for viewing the second screen and for typing, in the latter case letting your palms rest more naturally on the desktop. Theoretically, you could use the wrist rest extension as well, but it doesn’t line up correctly with the stand attached and so it seems to be one or the other. It’s also another complication in setting up the laptop as you move from place to place.

Mark Coppock/Digital Trends

Connectivity is decent for a laptop as thick as the ZenBook Pro Duo. On the left-hand side is a proprietary connector for the 240-watt power supply, a full-size HDMI port, and a 3.5mm audio jack. On the right-hand side are two USB-C ports with Thunderbolt 3 support and a USB-A 3.2 Gen 2 port. Conspicuously missing is an SD card slot, which would have made sense for the ZenBook Pro Duo’s creative market. Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.0 provide wireless connectivity.

Performance

My review unit was configured with a 10th-gen Intel Core i9-10980HK eight-core/16 thread CPU, a fast CPU when thermals allow it to stretch its legs. Asus paid a great deal of attention to thermal performance, with plenty of airflow as mentioned above, two fans with 97 blades, and a whopping six heat pipes, including one dedicated to the power supply module. There’s also a G-sensor that notes when the display is closed at less than an 80-degree angle, at which point the power is reduced to limit consumption and increase battery life.

Mark Coppock/Digital Trends

Asus provides a performance tuning utility that switches between standard and performance modes. I found the utility to be inconsistent — it increased the Cinebench R23 multi-core score to 9968, putting it among the fastest laptops we’ve tested, but it didn’t have any impact on our Handbrake test that converts a 420MB video to H.265.

It also increased the Geekbench 5 multi-core result to 7542, placing it higher among our comparison group. In our gaming benchmarks, the utility either had a minimal positive impact or reduced performance; I’ll discuss that more below. The utility didn’t impact the PCMark 10 score, which was particularly strong in the Content Creation portion and among the fastest machines.

Overall, the ZenBook Pro Duo was a speedy laptop but perhaps not quite as fast as one might expect given the Core i9 CPU. I imagine that even with all the efforts Asus put into managing thermals, the CPU still struggled to maintain full speed. Certainly, the fans would spin up, particularly in performance mode, and plenty of heat was blown out the side vents. Generally speaking, it can churn through CPU-intensive tasks and it managed to keep up with or outperform the latest Ryzen 7 CPUs — something we haven’t seen with many Intel-based laptops.

Given the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070, the ZenBook Pro Duo does well with apps that can take advantage of the GPU. It scored 647 in the PugetBench Adobe Premiere Pro benchmark, which is the fastest score we’ve seen from a laptop. The next closest is the Lenovo Legion 5 Pro gaming laptop with a Ryzen 7 5800H and an RTX 3070, which managed 622. If you use Adobe’s suite, then you’ll be thrilled with the ZenBook Pro’s performance.

Geekbench
(single/multi)
Handbrake
(seconds)
Cinbench R23 (single/multi)PCMark 10
Asus ZenBook Pro Duo 15 OLED (Core i9-10980HK)1266/69181061236/83265769
Acer ConceptD 7 Ezel
(10875H)
1301/7949114N/AN/A
HP Envy x360 15
(Ryzen 7 5700U)
1198/67901161258/81315419
Asus ZenBook 13 OLED
(Ryzen 7 5800U
1423/67581241171 /78246034
Dell XPS 15 (Core i7-10875H)1314/7549122N/AN/A
HP Envy 15 (Core i7-10750H)1274/5542139N/AN/A
MacBook Pro 13 (M1)1707/7337N/A1487 /7547N/A

Gaming was something of a mixed bag, perhaps due to the Nvidia Studio drivers installed on the ZenBook Pro Duo. Those are meant to ensure consistent and reliable performance in creative apps rather than hardcore gaming, which seems to have impacted gaming performance. Either that or the GPU struggled at times due to thermal issues, as I suspect happened with the CPU.

Furthermore, as I alluded to above, the Asus performance utility increased frame rates by just a few or decreased performance. Civilization VI, for example, saw frame rates drop significantly in performance mode. 3DMark scores did go up, with the ZenBook Pro Duo hitting 8,763 in Time Spy and 17,864 in Fire Strike in performance mode, but that increase didn’t translate to games.

The ZenBook Duo Pro did well at 1080p in Fortnite on Epic graphics, Civilization VI on Ultra graphics, and Assassin’s Creed Vahalla on Ultra High graphics, but it fell behind in Battlefield V on Ultra. Performance decreased disproportionally at 4K, with the ZenBook Pro Duo largely falling behind the pack at this resolution. I couldn’t test at 1440p out of the box, but it’s possible that if you can dig into the Nvidia settings and enable that resolution, you’ll be happy running games there.

The net result is that while the ZenBook Pro Duo doesn’t always live up to its components as a gaming laptop, it’s still quite serviceable for modern titles at 1080p and maybe 1440p. You might get better performance if you strip off the Studio drivers and install the regular Nvidia drivers, but then you’ll lose the advantage of better creative application performance and reliability. That’s likely not something the laptop’s target market will choose to do.

Laptop3DMark
Time Spy
3DMark
Fire Strike
Assassin’s Creed
Valhalla
(1080p Ultra High)
Battlefield V
(1080p Ultra)
Fortnite
(1080p Epic)
Civilization VI (1080p Ultra)
Asus ZenBook Pro Duo 15 OLED (RTX 3070)79981693274 fps78 fps102 fps111 fps
Razer Blade 14 (RTX 3070)86051967360 fps96 fps96 fps84 fps
Asus ROG Strix G15 (Radeon RX 6800M)105042680077 fps109 fps108 fps91 fps
Lenovo Legion 5 Pro (RTX 3070)91752103361 fps73 fps101 fps101 fps
MSI GS66 Stealth (RTX 3080)90971917570 fps97 fps140 fps140 fps

Primary display

Mark Coppock/Digital Trends

The ZenBook Pro Duo’s primary display is a 4K OLED panel with DisplayHDR 500 support that looks simply brilliant. OLED is special in that it typically makes colors pop without being oversaturated and generates blacks that look incredibly deep, and the panel that Asus chose for the ZenBook Pro Duo does both.

My colorimeter agreed with my subjective impression. First, the display was reasonably bright at 369 nits, well above our 300-nit threshold. That’s less than the OLED display on HP’s Spectre x360 15 that registered 426 nits and the Dell XPS 14 4K IPS display that came in at 442 nits but is still bright enough for most indoor environments. The contrast was superb as is typical of OLED displays, at 368,610:1 compared to the Spectre x360 15 OLED at 426,180:1 and the XPS 15 4K at 1480:1 (good for an IPS display).

Colors were wide at 100% of sRGB and 99% of AdobeRGB, where the Spectre x360 15 OLED managed 100% and 98%, respectively, and the XPS 15 4K hit 100% of both color gamuts. Accuracy was good at a DeltaE of 1.25 (less than 1.0 is considered excellent) and close to the Spectre x360 15 OLED’s 1.21 but not as good as the XPS 15 4K’s spectacular 0.65.

Simply put, the ZenBook Pro Duo display was a joy to use. Black text popped on white backgrounds, colors were vibrant and lovely, and binging Netflix was a dream thanks to the 4K resolution and HDR support. This is a display that everyone will love, including the creative pros who demand wide and accurate colors.

The audio is driven by two downward-firing speakers that provide clear sound and barely adequate volume. I’d like things to get a little louder, but it’s good enough for watching the occasional YouTube video. Mids and highs are fine, but there’s zero bass. You’ll want a pair of headphones for Netflix bingeing and music sessions.

Secondary display

Mark Coppock/Digital Trends

The ZenBook Pro Duo’s second display, called the ScreenPad+, is also OLED, running at 3840 x 1100. Like the primary display, it’s bright and colorful with deep blacks. I couldn’t quite position my colorimeter to get a formal reading of its quality, but it appears to be the equal of its larger sibling. Speaking of size, the second display is large enough to be useful, although the extreme widescreen format does mean that any maximized apps on it can look a little funky.

This laptop is designed for creators, and it’s those users who will get the most use out of the second display.

Asus packed a ton of functionality into the second display, all of which is accessible via a ScreenXpert Control Center menu that can be pinned to the left, right, or bottom of the display or allowed to float. The menu provides access to brightness, an App Navigator utility that makes it easy to move windows from one display to the other, a button to lock or unlock the keyboard, a button to show the ScreenPad+ desktop, a button to open the MyAsus app, a button to open the Launcher app that provides access to ScreenPad+ apps, and setup.

Useful Scree