Here’s what you need to know before you buy one
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At Computex 2026, ROG is celebrating its 20-year anniversary and continuing its relentless pursuit of dominance in the laptop gaming space. The newly unveiled 2026 ROG Strix SCAR 18 is a monolithic, 8.22-pound unyielding desktop replacement designed to push the absolute limits of portable silicon and thermodynamic engineering.
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Lately, the premium laptop market has been completely dominated by a collective love affair with modern OLED screens. However, ASUS is making a massive gamble by intentionally ditching OLED on its flagship machine. The tech landscape is shifting from pure contrast ratios to a brutal war over visual clarity and the elimination of motion blur during chaotic, high-frame-rate gameplay. The SCAR 18 exists to prove that specialized Mini LED tech can beat OLED at its own game when the action gets fast.
Hardware impressions: Look, feel and ergonomics
Stepping up to the preview table at Computex, the SCAR 18 immediately asserts itself. This machine does not want to hide in a backpack – it actually won’t fit in most – and it certainly doesn’t care about being dainty. The “Off Black” chassis feels reasonably rigid if handled properly, a necessity given it has to house a massive structural footprint to handle over 300W of internal power. My attempt to pick it up one-handed by the front corner failed miserably due to its heft and wouldn’t be recommended due to the strain it put on the plastic chassis.
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The enthusiast-focused engineering extends to the physical layout. ASUS has integrated its completely screwless “Q-Latch” design on the bottom panel, a massive quality-of-life perk for quick internal access. I was able to open the demo unit with 1 hand by pushing a latch, sliding the bottom plate up and lifting off the entire bottom cover.
On the outside, the port hub is explicitly built for the future by embracing dual massive Thunderbolt 5 pipelines. For flair, the lid features an animated AniMe Vision matrix. It is unashamedly loud, obtrusive and perfectly aligned with the classic Strix gamer ethos. You’ll be able to customize what’s displayed by typing in any message you want within Armoury Crate (I’m unsure of any character limit).
Under the hood: Key specs
The centerpiece of this entire design is the 18-inch 4K 240Hz ROG Nebula HDR Mini LED display. ASUS is debuting a proprietary “Nebula ELMB” (Extreme Low Motion Blur) system here.
By timing the thousands of local dimming zones to stay dark until the pixels have completely finished changing color, it theoretically eliminates mid-transition ghosting. It hits a blistering 1,600 nits of peak HDR brightness, and features a new ‘AGLR’ anti-glare treatment that noticeably cuts down convention center reflections.
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Spec breakdown
| Model Number | G835LXG-DS99-CA | G835LWG-DS98-CA |
| Operating System | Windows 11 Home | Windows 11 Home |
| Processor | Intel Core Ultra 9 Processor 290HX Plus 2.7 GHz; Intel AI Boost NPU up to 13TOPS | Intel Core Ultra 9 Processor 290HX Plus 2.7 GHz; Intel AI Boost NPU up to 13TOPS |
| Graphics | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 Laptop GPU
• ROG Boost: 1647MHz* at 175W • 24GB GDDR7 |
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 Laptop GPU
• ROG Boost: 1550MHz* at 175W • 24GB GDDR7 |
| Neural Processor | Intel AI Boost NPU up to 13TOPS | Intel AI Boost NPU up to 13TOPS |
| Display | 18-inch ROG Nebula HDR Display
• 4K (3840 x 2400) 16:10 Mini LED • DCI-P3: 100%, Refresh Rate: 240Hz • G-Sync, Pantone Validated |
18-inch ROG Nebula HDR Display
• 4K (3840 x 2400) 16:10 Mini LED • DCI-P3: 100%, Refresh Rate: 240Hz • G-Sync, Pantone Validated |
| Memory | 64GB (32GB DDR5-6400 SO-DIMM x 2)
• Max Capacity: 128GB (Dual Channel) |
64GB (32GB DDR5-6400 SO-DIMM x 2)
• Max Capacity: 128GB (Dual Channel) |
| Storage | 4TB Total (2TB + 2TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 Performance SSD in RAID 0) | 2TB Total (1TB + 1TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 Performance SSD in RAID 0) |
| I/O Ports | • 1x 3.5mm Combo Audio Jack
• 1x HDMI 2.1 FRL • 3x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A • 2x Thunderbolt 5 (DP / Power Delivery / G-SYNC • 1x 2.5G LAN port |
• 1x 3.5mm Combo Audio Jack
• 1x HDMI 2.1 FRL • 3x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A • 2x Thunderbolt 5 (DP / Power Delivery / G-SYNC) • 1x 2.5G LAN port |
| Keyboard/Touchpad | Backlit Chiclet Keyboard Per-Key RGB, Touchpad | Backlit Chiclet Keyboard Per-Key RGB, Touchpad |
| Camera | 1080P FHD IR Camera with Windows Hello | 1080P FHD IR Camera with Windows Hello |
| Audio | 4-speaker system with Smart Amp, Dolby Atmos, Hi-Res certification, AI noise-canceling | 4-speaker system with Smart Amp, Dolby Atmos, Hi-Res certification, AI noise-canceling |
| Connectivity | Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be) (Triple band) 2*2 + Bluetooth 5.4 | Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be) (Triple band) 2*2 + Bluetooth 5.4 |
| Battery & Power | 90WHrs, 4-cell Li-ion
• 450W Rectangle Conn AC Adapter |
90WHrs, 4-cell Li-ion
• 450W Rectangle Conn AC Adapter |
| Lighting Visuals | Aura Sync logo, Aura Sync Light Bar, AniMe Vision | Aura Sync logo, Aura Sync Light Bar, AniMe Vision |
| Weight | 3.73 Kg (8.22 lbs) | 3.70 Kg (8.16 lbs) |
| Dimensions | 39.9 x 29.8 x 2.35 ~ 3.50 cm | 39.9 x 29.8 x 2.35 ~ 3.50 cm |
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Key differences to note:
- GPU clock speed: The DS99 variant features a slightly higher boost clock configuration on its RTX 5090 (1647MHz vs 1550MHz).
- Storage capacity: The DS99 includes a massive 4TB RAID 0 array (2x 2TB), whereas the DS98 configuration drops down to a 2TB array (2x 1TB). Both can be upgraded to 2x 4TB for a total of 8TB of storage).
- Weight: Because of minor internal differences (likely the drive configurations), the DS99 weighs an extra 30 grams.
Early performance testing
While I couldn’t run independent benchmarks on the floor, the raw architecture handles an incredible 320W Total Platform Power limit under manual configurations. To keep the Core Ultra 9 and RTX 5090 from melting, the internal cooling block has been dramatically overhauled.
The primary Liquid Crystal Polymer (LCP) fans have seen a 43% height increase, driving a 40% jump in total airflow across a dense, end-to-end vapor chamber.
The demo lounge was incredibly noisy, so it was difficult to hear the cooling system in action when I was able to set the demo model to manual mode, but it did sound like the high-RPM triple fans didn’t give off as high pitched a hiss as other laptops I’ve reviewed recently. In fact, for comparison, my Zephyrus G14 in manual mode has its two fans spinning at 6500-6600 RPM max, generating 50dBA of noise according to Armoury Crate.
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The Strix SCAR 18 has 3 fans, spinning at 5800, 5900 and 7300 RPM and only generated 52.5dBA, so not a massive increase despite having an extra fan spinning at higher RPM.
The initial verdict
The 2026 ROG Strix SCAR 18 is shaping up to be an absolute powerhouse of raw computational muscle and a showcase of technical engineering prowess. It’s built for the hardware purist who needs desktop-grade performance on the move.
Pricing is still tightly under wraps, so our final evaluation will have to wait, but it’s safe to assume that this will be the most expensive Strix laptop ever built. If a retail sample eventually hits my test bench, I’ll be throwing real-world frame-pacing metrics and uncurated display tests at this machine to see if this massive Nebula ELMB display gamble truly pays off.
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