By Alex Cranz, managing editor and co-host of The Vergecast. She oversaw consumer tech coverage at Gizmodo for five years. Her work has also appeared in the WSJ and Wired.
Gaming laptops generate a lot of heat, and Dell’s Alienware brand long ago settled on giving its gaming laptops big butts in order to exhaust it. But the problem with a large rear end on a laptop is it looks kind of goofy and makes packing it up a little more troublesome, so the Alienware M16 R2 has gotten a little booty reduction.
Compared to the previous generation, the M16 R2 is just 9.82 inches deep. That’s 1.58 inches shaved off compared to the M16 R1, or about a 14-percent reduction in depth. Which should make it fit in a lap or on a cramped dorm room desk a heckuva lot easier.
To go along with that less obtrusive back end (officially called a “thermal shelf” by Dell) the M16 R2 also has a new “Stealth Mode” that should allow you to quickly switch the day-glo RGB keyboard lighting to a more muted white with the press of the Fn and F2 keys. The Stealth Mode will switch the keys to white, turn off any additional RGB, and set the performance profile to Quiet Mode. The feature worked exactly as intended when I checked it out a few weeks before CES.
The idea here is that the M16 R2 is meant for people who want to go and play games a lot but also sometimes want to use their gaming laptop as a regular laptop and not have to worry about weird looks as their laptop glows like a Vegas night and sounds like the engines on a 737.
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To that end, the M16 R2 will only be available with up to a Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070. If you want more GPU power, you’ll have to move up to the X16 R2 (more on it in a minute).
Besides being outfitted with either a 4050,
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