Monday, February 16, 2026
Trusted News Since 2020
American News Network
Truth. Integrity. Journalism.
General

Alienware 16 Area 51 Gaming Laptop Review

By Eric November 20, 2025

The Alienware 16 Area 51 has emerged as one of the standout gaming laptops of 2023, captivating gamers with its striking sci-fi design and robust performance. Weighing nearly 10 pounds with its power adapter, this laptop is more akin to a desktop replacement than a typical portable gaming device, making it an ideal choice for gamers who prioritize performance and aesthetics over portability. Priced between $2,199 and $3,599, with custom configurations reaching up to $5,559, the Alienware 16 offers a wide range of options, allowing users to tailor their system with various processors, graphics cards, and storage capacities. The unique teal and black color scheme, combined with features like customizable RGB lighting and a mechanical keyboard, ensures that the laptop not only performs well but also looks stunning on any gaming desk.

In terms of performance, the Alienware 16 Area 51 does not disappoint. It boasts a WQXGA IPS display with a resolution of 2560×1600 and a 240Hz refresh rate, providing crisp visuals and smooth gameplay. While it lacks an OLED display like some competitors, it compensates with vibrant colors and impressive brightness levels, making it suitable for daytime use. The laptop’s cooling system is noteworthy, effectively managing heat during intensive gaming sessions, with peak temperatures remaining well below the threshold for thermal throttling. The sound quality from its built-in speakers is surprisingly rich for a gaming laptop, enhancing the overall user experience whether you’re gaming, watching movies, or listening to music. However, the laptop’s substantial weight and reliance on a bulky power brick do raise concerns about its portability, making it less suitable for frequent travel.

While the Alienware 16 excels in gaming performance, it also serves as a competent daily driver. The keyboard, featuring Cherry Ultra-Low Profile switches, is one of the best in the gaming laptop market, providing an enjoyable typing experience. The smaller trackpad design, while not ideal for gaming, proves to be more functional for general use. Battery life, however, is a mixed bag; the laptop lasts around six hours under moderate use but drops significantly when gaming unplugged. Ultimately, the Alienware 16 Area 51 is a powerful gaming machine that combines stunning design with high performance, making it a compelling option for serious gamers willing to compromise on portability for an exceptional gaming experience.

The Alienware 16 Area 51 may just be the most unique
gaming laptop
I’ve reviewed this year. Its sci-fi-inspired styling immediately makes it stand out from the pack, but its great gaming performance and surprisingly heavy weight – nearly 10lbs with the power adapter included – make this more of a desktop replacement than a typical 16-inch gaming laptop. Its size and weight return with better cooling, high in-game fps, and a luxurious user experience.
The Alienware 16 Area 51 embodies so much of what makes a great gaming laptop, it’s hard not to fall in love – with a couple exceptions. But if you can live with a few trade-offs, what you’re left with is a portable gaming rig that looks, feels, and plays every bit of its $3,000 price point.
Purchasing Guide
The Alienware 16 Area 51 is available in multiple prebuilt configurations ranging from $2,199 to $3,599. It can also be customized with different tiers of processor, graphics card, storage, memory, webcam, and keyboard with prices ranging from $1,849 to $5,559. Custom configurations can be ordered
directly from Dell
while preset configurations can be acquired from retailers including
Amazon
,
Best Buy
, and
Newegg
.
Design and Features
Alienware’s designs aren’t always winners, but no one could accuse the brand of playing it safe. I’ve come to expect a healthy dose of science fiction from Alienware products after years of Alien-inspired designs. The last few years in the gaming laptop space have seen the brand strike a middle ground between uniqueness and general good looks, and the Area 51 is one of the best examples.
It’s available in a single colorway, a deep teal which makes up most of its lid. It’s not a common color for gaming laptops but looks beautiful in contrast to the black used throughout the rest of the case. It’s not a machine that will pass for a business laptop anytime soon, unless business laptops start shipping with glowing alien heads on the lid and full RGB keyboard decks, but it’s not garish enough to be distracting if you turn off the lighting.
There are two less-common display upgrade options to choose from, and I recommend taking advantage of both. When you customize your own system, you can choose between a 4K and 1080p webcam and, surprisingly, there’s no price difference between them (though, presumably, the 4K camera will have a small impact on battery life, but I wasn’t able to test this to confirm). You can also choose between a standard or fully mechanical
gaming keyboard
with Cherry Ultra-Low Profile switches for an additional $50.
I was surprised to find that Dell didn’t outfit the system with an OLED display like the
Razer Blade 16
and other close competitors around its price. Instead, it uses a 16-inch WQXGA IPS display with a 16:10 aspect ratio. Though it can’t deliver anywhere near the same black levels as an OLED, it looks very good and delivers a crisp picture thanks to its 2560×1600 resolution and esports-ready 240Hz refresh rate. It also doesn’t carry the same risk of burn-in or reduced performance over time and still offers great colors and 500 nits of peak brightness for use during the day.
The system is a chunker, though. On its own, it weighs in at 7.49lbs and is 1.1 inches thick at its tallest point. If you actually plan on gaming and want the best performance, you’ll also need to lug around the bulky power brick, which adds another couple of pounds. Frankly, it’s not the kind of system I personally want to carry around every day. You feel every bit of its weight, even without the brick, which makes this system feel much more like a desktop replacement rather than something you’d actually carry with you throughout the day. But you
can
, so for the intermittent gaming marathon at a friend’s house or the campus library, it could still be a compelling option.
It comes with a generous port selection, so connecting peripherals or a docking station won’t be an issue. And I have to commend Alienware for making good use of its added thickness by putting most of that I/O around the back where it won’t get in the way of a mouse. There are three USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A ports, two Type-C Thunderbolt ports (version four for the
RTX 5060
and
RTX 5070
and Thunderbolt 5 for everything higher), and a full-size HDMI 2.1 video-out for connecting a monitor. Thunderbolt 5 is a major upgrade here, offering up to 80Gbps of bi-directional bandwidth to support the highest resolution external monitors. The power brick also connects around the rear and uses a straight plug that doesn’t get in the way of other cables. The only other ports are on the left side. There, you’ll find an SD card reader and an audio combo jack.
The system also makes good use of its size for cooling. There are plenty of vents to bring cool air in and exhaust it out the back, away from your hands. The keyboard gets warm when gaming but doesn’t get hot or uncomfortable to use. The vent right above it does, but it’s away from your fingers. I recorded a peak temperature of 86°C after benchmarking for a good hour, which is well away from the range of thermal throttling. The system also didn’t get excessively loud, though like other high-performance gaming laptops, its fans are loud enough to warrant headphones if white noise bothers you – or you could just crank up the speakers.
The sound quality on the built-in speakers is surprisingly full-bodied compared to what you would usually expect from a gaming laptop. It uses dual two-watt speakers for bass, complete with their own amplifier that’s separate from its pair of two-watt tweeters. This isn’t common in gaming laptops, or even full-size
gaming PCs
, and allows the system to sound louder and more full as a result. Watching Netflix or listening to music with the included speakers is a no-brainer. For gaming, I would still opt for a
gaming headset
due to the loud fans.
My sample was sent with the Cherry mechanical keyboard, and it is 100% worth the cost to upgrade. Though it’s a little louder than a membrane keyboard, Cherry’s ultra low profile switches are sublime to type on with great tactility and the classic precision feel iconic to mechanical keyboards. They’re also per-key backlit and fully programmable, so you can change colors and assign macros to your heart’s content.
The trackpad also stands out by not being oversized like most other gaming laptops. It measures 4.5 by 2.5 inches, which I prefer to the massive trackpads on most gaming laptops. It may not offer as much real estate for gaming, but it stays out of the way for typing and, let’s be real, who uses a trackpad for serious gaming anyway? Like the keyboard, it’s also backlit and able to deliver a convincing RGB wave of its own.
The 4K webcam on my sample was also excellent. It handled challenging lighting well and its sharper quality was immediately noticeable. But since most teleconferencing apps still limit you to 1080p, whether it’s a real benefit over the FHD version will depend on how you plan to use it. There’s no privacy shutter, which is a bummer, but it does support Windows Hello and worked reliably for me throughout my testing.
There’s another interesting feature around the bottom of the system. Like the Razer Blade 18, Dell has added a window into the bottom panel giving you a peek into its internals. The pane is made of Gorilla Glass for durability and scratch resistance, and is surrounded by a protective lip, but I could still see this getting microscratches over time.
Software
The Alienware 16 comes with the Alienware Command Center for system configuration. It’s a very polished suite that’s designed to be easy to use, so newcomers don’t need to worry about being overwhelmed. At the same time, it offers more depth for advanced users that may want to try their hand at overclocking.
Opening it up for the first time, you’re given a brief introduction to its different capabilities and then dropped into the Command Center home page. This page provides you with a quick overview of system diagnostics like CPU and GPU utilization and temperature data. The same panel allows you to change your current performance mode, launch games, and, by clicking on the graphic of the laptop, customize the lighting of the keyboard, trackpad, and logo on the lid.
If you click into the Performance tab, you’ll be treated to a much larger view of the diagnostics from the home page. Along the top are six different modes: ExpressCharge for quicker charging, Quiet, Balanced, Performance, Overdrive, and Custom. Clicking a tooltip to the right shows details for each mode in both a star ranking and in text, so you know exactly how each balances performance, temperatures, and battery life.
The game launcher is a nice addition, but I personally never use systems like this. It essentially doubles up on Steam and other launchers. I could see launching a game from here if you had it open anyway, but otherwise, it just adds another piece of software running in the background.
Performance
The Alienware 16 Area 51 has a lot going for it in the design department, but that doesn’t amount to much if the laptop doesn’t hold its own when it comes to gaming. The system definitely does, and I suspect it has to do with its cooling system, but there’s more to the story than pure numbers.
Before getting into facts and figures, a quick reminder about our testing procedure at IGN. Every system we test is put through a series of synthetic and in-game benchmarks, all with the same settings and matching conditions, so we can provide the best comparisons possible. While the synthetic benchmarks we use are all standardized, in-game benchmarks offer many more options. To keep things consistent, we set all of our games to high or max settings and demonstrate the performance with different levels of upscaling and frame generation. Our settings are disclosed in the charts.
For this review, I’m presenting the Alienware 16 in comparison to the
Gigabyte Aorus Master 16
, which uses the same processor and graphics card. I’ve also included the
Razer Blade 16
, which utilizes the AMD Ryzen 9 AI HX 370 CPU and the higher performance
RTX 5090
, but in a thinner and more portable design.
The Alienware 16 Area 51 I reviewed is a high-performance configuration with a steep $3,000 price point to match, but you don’t need to spend that much if you’re willing to scale back on some of the components. Dropping to an Intel Core Ultra 5 255 HX and an RTX 5060 graphics card drops the price all the way to $1,849 when ordered direct from Dell.
To its credit, the company provides plenty of configuration options to help you dial in the system for your needs. In addition to the two processor options, you can choose any Nvidia laptop GPU up to the RTX 5090, and choosing anything from the RTX 5070 Ti up also nets you the higher performance CPU. It can be configured with up to 64GB of memory and 12TB of NVMe storage, both of which are user upgradeable.
Beginning with synthetics, the Alienware 16 comes out swinging, eking out higher scores across the board compared to the Aorus Master 16. Every score is close, as you would expect from a system with the same core components, but the consistently higher performance definitely points to a better implementation from Dell. The Blade 16 bests both in 3DMark’s Speed Way and Steel Nomad benchmarks thanks to its higher-performance RTX 5090. The results of the Procyon Office Productivity benchmark highlight the advantage the Intel Core Ultra 9 275 HX offers over the AMD Ryzen 9 AI HX 370.
The Alienware’s performance advantage remains consistent when we move to in-game benchmarks. Performance remains expectedly close between it and the Aorus Master 16, but it still pulls the same or slightly better performance across everything but Assassin’s Creed Shadows with frame generation disabled. The difference is small enough to not be noticeable and potentially a result of a process spinning up in the background.
At the laptop’s native 1600p resolution, the trend continues. With the exception of Assassin’s Creed, the Alienware 16 pulls a consistent, if small, lead over the Aorus and both of them match or beat the Razer Blade 16 more often than you might expect.
The Alienware 16’s cooling system may be the cause, as the Aorus Master reached a peak of 93ºC in my testing. It could also be how Dell has configured power delivery for the laptop. Either way, it offers impressive performance even in demanding games.
When it comes to use as a daily driver, it’s mostly excellent. The keyboard is the best I’ve ever used on a gaming laptop, even topping the MSI Titan 18 HX AI which also has a Cherry ULP mechanical keyboard. The trackpad has also been one of my favorites. I prefer a smaller trackpad in general, but the accuracy and reliability it offered were fantastic. This is one of the only laptops I’ve tested where I didn’t misclick or activate it by accident even once, despite cranking out thousands of words in the time I’ve had it.
The biggest issue facing it is how heavy it is and just how much it
needs
its power brick. Gaming performance takes a big hit the minute it’s unplugged and battery life plummets. This goes with the territory for gaming laptops, of course, but most others with this size display aren’t tipping the scales as heavily as the Alienware 16. The Aorus Master 16, for comparison, is almost two pounds lighter while offering similar performance and a nicer OLED screen. Battery life tanks when it’s unplugged too, of course, but at least it’s easier to carry with the power brick.
For pure productivity, it works well and you’ll be able to get a few hours out of it for mixed use. But, in that case, you can also take advantage of its Thunderbolt ports and charge it with a much smaller 100W GaN charger. Just be warned, it’s not enough to overcome the power draw when you’re gaming, or to unlock its full performance, so it’s a solution that only works some of the time.
When it comes to battery life, the Alienware 16 was able to last just over six hours in Procyon’s battery life test with the screen set to half brightness. I personally find this is a bit too dim for my own use, even indoors, but that comes down to preference. At that brightness and with mixed use between Google Docs, Sheets, web browsing, and Microsoft Office, it lasted closer to four hours with Energy Saver mode turned on.

Related Articles

The New Allowance
General

The New Allowance

Read More →
Fake Ozempic, Zepbound: Counterfeit weight loss meds booming in high-income countries despite the serious health risks
General

Fake Ozempic, Zepbound: Counterfeit weight loss meds booming in high-income countries despite the serious health risks

Read More →
The Trump Administration Actually Backed Down
General

The Trump Administration Actually Backed Down

Read More →