First impression
For this review I was allowed to test the ASUS ProArt P16 OLED for a few weeks.
The laptop comes with the pressure-sensitive ASUS Pen 2.0, the laptop cannot be laid flat, so in fact you only make some adjustments and not complete drawings on your screen, and that is a shame.
A separate drawing tablet is therefore a must, the touchscreen on the other hand makes working without an external mouse more convenient, although you do have to clean your screen afterwards.
The DialPad did not work immediately but still needed some updates. This can be adjusted by holding the touch button in the middle. That works well at first, but during use your finger touches the touch button and if you hold it down for too long, the settings screen opens, which causes a lot of annoyance and makes the DialPad unworkable.
A central keyboard looks nice and works well for a lot of typing, but many design programs require a numeric keypad, so you will have to use an external keyboard.
This does provide space for very good speakers with Dolby Atmos, which makes it limp back to a
media laptop, and we already have enough of those.
OLED 4K
If you are used to an HD screen where you always have to enlarge your menus, 4K is a revelation, even small
letters are exceptionally sharp without adjustments in Windows, a solution for programs where the
font cannot be set, read enlarged.
The box also contains a warning about the possible burn-in of OLED screens, which is
contradictory given that ASUS has stated on various media that this does not happen with their screens. With computer programs, menu texts are constantly in the same location, so I don't know what to think of such a warning.
Whisper and performance mode
As long as you are working on battery power, the laptop is in whisper mode by default, the fans are always off. To enable the graphics card, you will have to set it to performance mode and that is only possible when the laptop is connected to the charger. You can set the battery to not be charged more than 80%.
Some software, including ASUS MuseTree, does not even work without the graphics card, so note that it does not work without a power supply either. The program checks this in advance when it is started. When using the GPU, the 3 fans will start running in performance mode.
What is confusing is that you can not only set the laptop in the ProArt Creator Hub, but that the AMD processor and Nvidia GPU also have their own settings menu. I think it is wise not to change these settings but to let ASUS do this.
Artificial intelligence
The Copilot key could have been omitted because the AI that you open with it can also be reached via a browser, you are now missing the right control key, I would have preferred a Play button rather than a smiley key, it is a creator laptop and not a toy, right?
There is enough AI available that simply works via the GPU, then a separate NPU seems unnecessary
Conclusion
If you work a lot on the go, this is a very nice laptop, I just wonder how often this happens to buy this laptop for this, because of the high price there is normally no budget left for peripherals and if you really want to create then you need it, then I prefer to pay less for a laptop without a 4K screen that I then spend on an external monitor, a good mouse and keyboard and a separate drawing tablet. A healthy body is also worth something to me.