Dell has announced the new Alienware 16X Aurora at CES 2026, one of the company’s first gaming laptops with anti-glare OLED screens. Beyond gaming, it could also be a potential MacBook Pro competitor if a Windows is a hard requirement.
This new iteration of the Alienware 16X Aurora is still the same mid-sized gaming laptop with a 16-inch screen, an aluminum lid and bottom cover, rounded corners to help portability, and a dark ‘Interstellar Indigo’ color scheme. Unlike many other gaming laptops, there’s no thermal shelf—the hump behind the screen—so it’s a bit sleeker than some other comparable laptops. It’s 0.92 inches in depth (23.4 millimeters) at the rear, and 0.76 inches in depth (19.2 millimeters) at the front.
The main improvement here is the 16-inch OLED panel, with a 16:10 aspect ratio, 240Hz refresh rate, and WQXGA (2560 x 1600) resolution. It has an anti-glare coating that “reduces gloss by up to 32% for fewer reflections,” and prevents some fingerprint smudges. The Alienware 16X Aurora is one of Dell’s first gaming laptops to get this display panel, alongside the larger Alienware 16 Area-51.
Dell said in its announcement, “These panels address one of the most common pain points gamers face with OLED — glare and reflections in bright environments — while preserving everything that makes it extraordinary.”
This updated model can be configured with Intel Core Ultra Series 2 HX processors, ranging from an Ultra 5 Processor 235HX to an Ultra 9 Processor 275HX. There are two options for dedicated graphics: a GeForce RTX 5060 or RTX 5070, both with 8GB GDDR7 VRAM. That’s plenty of power for PC gaming and GPU-demanding productivity tasks, like 4K video editing, 3D modelling, or running local AI models.
To keep those components cool, the Alienware 16X Aurora uses a “Cyro-Chamber” on the bottom of the laptop with focused airflow, using “Alienware Cyro-Tech Cooling technology.” Previous models seemed to have decent cooling, so that shouldn’t be an issue on this updated version.
The rest of the hardware includes a Thunderbolt 4 connector with DisplayPort 2.1, a USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C port with DisplayPort 2.0, HDMI 2.1, two USB 3.1 Gen 1 Type-A ports, Ethernet LAN, 512GB-2TB NVMe SSD storage, 16-64GB DDR5 RAM, and a 1080p webcam with Windows Hello support. The keyboard also has programmable RGB lights, because this is a gaming laptop, after all. Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4 are provided by an Intel or MediaTek wireless module, depending on the model.
The higher-quality OLED screen and dedicated GPU could make this a capable MacBook Pro alternative, especially if some software you need is only available on Windows. It will probably work with desktop Linux distributions as well, but if you need a high-end laptop with great Linux support, a System76 laptop would likely be a better choice.
Dell has not confirmed pricing for the updated Alienware 16X Aurora, but it will be available sometime in the first quarter of 2026. The current model with an LCD screen starts at $1,500, so the OLED version should be more expensive than that.
Source: Dell

