The Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio Review: Dynamic Design
by Brett Howse on October 5, 2021 9:00 AM EST- Posted in
- Laptops
- Microsoft
- Surface
- Surface Laptop Studio
Graphics Performance
As the successor to the Surface Book, the Surface Laptop Studio builds on that heritage by continuing to offer a reasonably powerful GPU in a small form factor laptop. Although not a gaming laptop by any stretch, the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3050 Ti Laptop graphics is a stout GPU for a notebook of this size. Microsoft also continues the tradition of the Surface Book by also offering a model without the dGPU, which they have found has been popular in certain segments such as education where the dGPU is not needed.
Microsoft provided the Core i7 model for review, which comes with the discrete GPU option, so that will be the focus of this review.
The NVIDIA RTX 3050 Ti was announced earlier this year and features 2560 CUDA cores. The 128-bit memory bus clearly puts it at a disadvantage compared to the RTX 3060/3070/3080, but the lowered TDP means that it fits into smaller and lighter devices, such as the Surface Laptop Studio. Built on the 8 nm Samsung process, this Ampere-based GPU brings all the latest RTX features to the Surface Laptop Studio with 80 tensor cores and 20 ray tracing cores and is the first time Microsoft has fitted an RTX GPU into one of their devices since the Surface Book 3 was outfitted with the GTX 1660 Ti.
To see how the Surface Laptop Studio performs in graphical tests it was run through our laptop gaming suite. Please note that we have recently updated the suite with several new games, so until we test more devices there are limited results on those new titles.
As usual, we will start with some synthetic tests, then move on to gaming results.
3DMark
We are migrating the laptop suite over to the latest Time Spy test, so for now the Surface Laptop Studio is the only device tested. Fire Strike is the most demanding of the older test suite, and here the Surface Book with its GTX 1660 Ti slightly outperforms the Surface Laptop Studio, but on Sky Diver and Cloud Gate the tables are turned significantly.
GFXBench
GFXBench 5.0 includes DirectX 12 tests for Aztec Ruins, and as a multi-platform test it is quite a light workload for any laptop with a discrete GPU. Again, the Surface Book 3 slightly outperforms here.
Tomb Raider
In our first gaming benchmark the Surface Laptop Studio does surpass the Surface Book 3, although not by a wide margin on the 1920x1080 resolution.
Rise of the Tomb Raider
Much like Tomb Raider, performance is nearly identical between the Surface Book 3 and the Surface Laptop Studio. The GTX 1660 Ti is still able to hang with Ampere.
Shadow of the Tomb Raider
Again the Surface Book and Laptop Studio trade blows, although the Surface Book is ahead in the higher resolution by a wide margin.
Strange Brigade
Strange Brigade has a wide range of playable settings, allowing it to be played on integrated GPUs right up to the biggest GPUs around. The Surface Laptop Studio and Surface Book are again in a dead heat.
Shadow of War
Again we can see that the beefier GPU in the Surface Book 3, despite being a generation older, can still outperform Ampere. The GTX 1660 Ti offers more memory bandwidth and more ROPS than the RTX 3050 Ti, so it is not a huge surprise. Add in the higher TDP offered in the Surface Book and it makes sense why it can stretch ahead on the more demanding workloads.
Far Cry 5
Far Cry is a very CPU bound game, and as such the Surface Laptop Studio is able to stretch ahead here in the value settings, and keep pace in the 1920x1080 benchmark.
New Games to the Suite
For 2021 the gaming suite is being revamped, but as we only have scores from the Surface Laptop Studio, they will be presented here without any comparisons.
GPU Performance Conclusion
Microsoft calls the Surface Laptop Studio their most powerful Surface yet, and you can argue that is true of the system as a whole. On the GPU side though, the outgoing Surface Book 3 offered a more powerful GPU which offered more memory bandwidth, more ROPs, and more physical memory. It was of course able to do that because of the unique nature of the device, where the GPU got its own thermal zone in the laptop base. At best, the Surface Laptop Studio is just about as capable on the GPU front, although of course with the added benefit of the RTX architecture for Tensor and Ray Tracing abilities.
The RTX 3050 Ti is still a capable upgrade over integrated graphics, but certainly is not in the same league as the larger GPUs, especially at the power limits enforced on it in this design.
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Valantar - Friday, October 8, 2021 - link
Finally someone mentioned this! I've been waiting for some in-depth pictures of this laptop, and after reading something like five reviews I haven't seen _a single_ close-up shot of the hinge. Wtf? There's even a whole page here dedicated to the design, yet the only photos are of the front?Brett Howse - Friday, October 8, 2021 - link
There is a photo on the last page showing the fabric covered hinge.Valantar - Monday, October 11, 2021 - link
Saying that "shows the hinge" is pretty generous. It's a photo of nearly the whole laptop showing what it looks like with the display folded back. Definitely not sufficient to gain any real insight into what this assembly looks like irl.eastcoast_pete - Wednesday, October 6, 2021 - link
Looks nice, is expensive. Among the things I don't get: why no larger battery? It's not an ultraportable, and not meant as such, is it? If this could be had with a 90 or 95 Wh battery, it would last a lot longer when not plugged in, and that might be worth the extra weight for someET - Wednesday, October 6, 2021 - link
Some people already commented on the comparisons to other laptops. I noticed that there were no comparisons to Ryzen 5000 laptops. In particular, the Acer Swift X will be an interesting comparison, as it's a ultraportable with a 3050 Ti. Would be nice if you could get one for review.Findecanor - Wednesday, October 6, 2021 - link
"... already great keyboards in previous Surface devices."I strongly disagree. Slick types of plastic. Bumpy space bars. Miniscule key travel. Keys too wide. And the arrow keys are still in a large-half-large configuration and not a proper inverse-T like what even Apple has reverted to.
MakaanPL - Wednesday, October 6, 2021 - link
What about Dolby Vision?While it's great that sRGB is accurate, games and movies could benefit from dynamic HDR. Are any VOD services compatible?
vladx - Saturday, October 9, 2021 - link
Dolby Vision requires a DCI-P3 display for any meaningful quality differences.vladx - Saturday, October 9, 2021 - link
And also the screen's brightness is too low for HDR.blppt - Wednesday, October 13, 2021 - link
Any IPS display is going to suck for HDR. By their very nature they can't do deep blacks.