Final Words

What’s perhaps most surprising about the Huawei MateBook X Pro is that the company is a fairly new entrant to the PC market, but they’ve delivered one of the best Ultrabooks you can buy in only a couple of iterations. There’s a lot of good, very little bad, and Huawei is practically sitting on an island when you talk about value.

The company seems to be unabashed about where they’ve gotten their design inspiration from for the MateBook X Pro, but despite it having a distinct MacBook Pro look to it, Huawei has delivered their own take, with amazingly thin bezels on this 3:2 display. They’ve incorporated the fingerprint reader into the power button, but there’s still an actual row of function keys too. From a design standpoint, the Huawei MateBook X Pro is one of the nicest looking Ultrabooks you can buy.

Huawei also stepped into the future with both USB-C and Thunderbolt 3, but also kept a USB-A port as well for those of us with legacy devices, which is almost everyone. It’s expansion done right. There’s no loss of device thinness either by including the USB-A port, and it sure makes life easier when you want to do almost anything. USB-C is the future, but that doesn’t mean you need to ignore the present. And for those that are still solidly in the present, Huawei ships the MateBook X Pro with a USB-C dongle with USB-A, HDMI, and somewhat strangely, a VGA connector, and even another USB-C port so you don't even lose the original port. That's a nice touch.

Huawei has delivered a good keyboard as well, despite the limited amount of key travel. They’ve done a great job on the switch resistance to make it feel like a solid keystroke. The oversized trackpad is not so oversized as to make it too easy to accidentally bump it, and it is one of the smoothest trackpads we’ve ever seen on a PC.

There’s plenty of performance as well, with the same CPU performance you’d expect in a current generation Ultrabook featuring Intel’s 8th generation U series processors, but Huawei has also added in a discrete NVIDIA GeForce MX150 GPU with 2 GB of GDDR5. It’s not a gaming system by any means, but the extra grunt from the MX150 does allow you to perform tasks that would bring the integrated UHD 620 GPU to its knees, and the combination of MX150 and Core i7-8550U outperform the Ryzen 7 2700U thanks to the CPU not sharing a TDP with the GPU.

Huawei is also one of the few PC makers to truly deliver an excellent display. The 3000x2000 resolution panel is crisp, and offers one of the highest brightness levels we’ve seen, but also some of the best contrast. The display accuracy isn’t quite class leading, but it’s close, and far better than pretty much any PC OEM other than Microsoft.

The only major complaint is the webcam placement, which is hidden under a fake function key, but depending on your needs, this could not be a real issue at all, and the ability to hide the webcam is certainly a privacy benefit. Ian has been using the MateBook X Pro as well and his experience hasn’t been as positive, with some issues with hesitation that he’s not had a chance to dig into, and he’s used the MateBook X from last year as well and prefers it to the new Pro.

With all of these features, you’d expect the MateBook X Pro to be competitively priced against a Dell XPS 13 or Microsoft Surface Pro, but that’s the real kicker. The Huawei MateBook X Pro is priced hundreds of dollars less than most of the competition, while providing a superior product to most. The value here is undeniable, even though it’s hard to think of a $1500 laptop as a value product. The base model with a Core i5-8250U, 8 GB of RAM, and a 256 GB SSD is just $1200, but unlike most laptops, the higher end model is an even better deal. For just $300 more, you bump the CPU up to a Core i7-8550U, double the RAM to 16 GB, double the SSD to 512 GB, and add in the GeForce MX150 GPU. That’s an impressive upgrade for not much more money.

Other PC makers need to stand up and take notice. The MateBook X Pro has arrived.

Wireless, Speakers, Thermals, and Software
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  • Brett Howse - Friday, June 29, 2018 - link

    No it's using 4 - see the GPU page.
  • skavi - Sunday, July 1, 2018 - link

    Oh, dunno how I missed that. Thanks!
  • Brett Howse - Wednesday, June 27, 2018 - link

    Just another comment on your comparison to Vega. Vega definitely holds its own here with a similar TDP but shared with the CPU. They don't have the ST performance to keep up with the i7 though which definitely hurts. Vega is quite good though when you keep the power in check.
  • cfenton - Wednesday, June 27, 2018 - link

    My biggest concern with Huawei (other than security) is post-purchase support. Do they have repair centres in Canada and the US? Do they have partnerships with local repair shops where I can take it for warranty service? I don't want to pay to ship my laptop to China if it breaks, much less deal with setting up a replacement for a few weeks while it's being fixed.

    Say what you want about Apple's prices, but their service is excellent and convenient. I imagine Microsoft stores would be similar, but there are far fewer of those.
  • Tchamber - Wednesday, June 27, 2018 - link

    Thank you for this review, been looking for one on my Envy 17t for a long time, and this Huawei is virtually identical, excepting my screen size and 3840*2160 resolution. Holds up pretty well against the competition.
  • skavi - Wednesday, June 27, 2018 - link

    Is there any chance you could check how many lanes the Thunderbolt controller is connected to?
  • s.yu - Saturday, July 21, 2018 - link

    2. Notebookcheck did a test but I can't paste the link, just go search the model on the site's internal search.
  • Notmyusualid - Thursday, June 28, 2018 - link

    Everytime someone releases yet-another small-screen laptop - God kills a kitten.
  • SFNR1 - Thursday, June 28, 2018 - link

    i work on a 12" Macbook and am allergic to cats so go ahead :-)
  • xucuvij - Thursday, June 28, 2018 - link

    nice

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