The Huawei Matebook X Pro 2020 is a premium
thin and light notebook, but despite the smaller
size it’s still got discrete Nvidia MX250
graphics inside.
It’s got a solid aluminium build with a
space grey finish, no sharp corners or edges
anywhere.
If you've also got a supported Huawei phone,
you can tap it on the right towards the front
and it will use NFC to activate sharing.
Basically this integration allows you to view
the phone on the laptop and drag files or
text between them, or use the laptop for messaging
with its keyboard instead of phone touch screen.
The weight is listed as 1.33kg on their site,
and mine was a little below this.
With the small Type-C 65 watt charger and
cable for charging we’re looking at just
over 1.5kg or 3.36lb.
It’s definitely a smaller and very portable
machine when compared to others, the screen
bezels on the sides are just 6.5mm thin, so
we’ve got a high 91% screen to body ratio.
The Matebook X pro has a 13.9” 10 point
multitouch screen with a 3 by 2 aspect ratio
and a large 3000 by 2000 resolution, so there’s
a bit more vertical space compared to a standard
16 by 9 screen.
The touch screen worked alright, while drawing
with my finger there seemed to be a little
lag, it didn’t come with a pen for drawing
though, otherwise it was fine just interacting
with Windows.
It’s got some built in shortcuts too, like
3 finger swipe to take a screenshot.
I’ve measured colour gamut with the Spyder
5, and got 98% of sRGB, 68% of NTSC, 74% of
AdobeRGB, and 73% of DCI-P3.
At full brightness I measured the panel at
506 nits in the center with a 1290:1 contrast
ratio, so some nice results.
Backlight bleed was extremely minor, just
some small glow down the bottom corners which
I never noticed during normal use, but this
will vary between machines and panels.
There’s almost no flex to the screen when
intentionally trying to move it, the metal
lid feels very sturdy, however while doing
this it did slide around a bit, identifying
a different issue.
It seems that the feet underneath are a harder
material and not that grippy so it’s easier
to slide around on a flat surface.
Chassis flex was also on the lower side when
pushing down hard, overall it felt sturdy
and well built.
Despite the smaller size, there were no problems
opening it up with one finger, it felt well
balanced and sat fine on my lap.
The 720p camera has an interesting placement,
it’s between the F6 and F7 keys, you just
push it down when you want to use it and it
pops up out of the keyboard, so this also
acts as a physical privacy filter.
Due to the camera placement there’s no way
of adjusting it, and when you type on the
keyboard your fingers do kind of get in the
way a bit, and this is what it looks like
when we put it down below the keyboard, so
a nice dark view of the internals.
The keyboard has white backlighting which
illuminates all keys and secondary key functions,
and brightness can be adjusted between two
levels or turned off with the F3 key, though
it didn’t seem too bright.
The chiclet keyboard was good to type with,
it felt a little clicky and I had no problems
with it, here’s how it sounds to give you
an idea of what to expect.
There’s a fingerprint scanner in the power
button above the keyboard on the right, and
I found it to work very fast and accurately.
When you power on the machine it will use
the fingerprint when Windows is ready, so
it will log you in with just one touch from
being off.
The precision touchpad was quite large for
a 13 inch laptop, it’s using all available
space.
It clicks down anywhere and feels great to
use.
Fingerprints show up, but as a smooth matte
finish they aren’t too easy to see and are
easy to clean with a microfiber cloth.
On the left we’ve got a 3.5mm audio combo
jack and two USB Type-C ports, both can be
used to charge though the port at the back
will be faster, and both support DisplayPort
out via the Intel iGPU, while the right side
just has a USB 3 Type-A port at the back.
It also comes with a Type-C dongle which gives
you VGA and HDMI ports along with another
Type-C so you’re not losing the port from
the dongle.
There’s nothing going on over on the back
or front, both are just clean.
Underneath is clean too, no air intakes here,
just the hard rubber feet.
To get inside you need to take out 8 TR5 screws,
and the 4 down the front are shorter than
the 4 at the back.
Inside we’ve got the battery down the front,
and we can just see the 1TB M.2 SSD below
the heatsink to the back left, so the cooling
needs to be taken off to change that but at
least it can be upgraded unlike the RAM, though
soldered memory is quite standard for these
smaller machines.
The front facing speakers are on either side
of the keyboard, they don’t look like much
but they sounded well above most other laptops
that I’ve tested.
There was some bass and they still sounded
clear at max volume, though there was some
vibration in the wrist rest area, and the
latencymon results were looking good.
The Matebook X Pro is powered by a 56wh battery,
and with the keyboard lighting off and screen
brightness set to 50% it was able to last
for just over 8 hours, a fair result when
compared to other options considering the
smaller battery size.
At idle it was cool to the touch, for context
most laptops I test are around the same 30
degrees on the exterior at idle.
With a CPU and GPU stress test it’s warmer,
in the mid 40s in the center.
The wrist rests were a little warm, it was
warmer on the keyboard but never felt hot,
let’s have a listen to the fan noise.
It was silent at idle, and then under stress
test the single fan was able to get a fair
bit louder when compared to many other thin
and light machines I’ve tested.
It wasn’t a high pitched noise though, and
this is a worst case stress test.
Even with this worst case load we’re just
looking at 76 degrees Celsius on the CPU and
77 for the GPU, so not bad at all considering
the thinner form factor, though this was because
the processor only ran at 8 watts with a 2GHz
speed over all 4 cores, so still above the
1.8GHz base clock of the i7.
When we look at processor performance, it’s
one of the lowest I’ve tested in a while,
but I think it’s also the first time I’ve
had the 10510U processor, and at 13” this
is one of the smallest, so that’s going
to be expected.
Although not a gaming laptop by any means,
as it’s got Nvidia MX250 graphics it should
be possible to do some light weight gaming.
All testing was done at 720p with the lowest
setting preset available.
The esports titles are going quite well, and
while the AAA games were usable at minimum
settings, just don’t expect an amazing experience.
I’ve used Crystal Disk Mark to test the
1TB NVMe M.2 SSD, and the speeds were quite
good.
For updated pricing check the links in the
description, as prices will change over time.
At the time of recording, here in Australia
the exact configuration I’ve looked at is
$3200 AUD, which converts to around $2000
USD, so definitely a more expensive option
granted stuff typically just costs more here
than in the US.
This is the highest end version of the Matebook
though, there are cheaper options too.
Overall I thought the Matebook X Pro was a
nice machine, and I would use it over my cheaper
Xiaomi Mi Air.
The main problem I had was just the level
of performance on offer for the price tag.
Smaller machines with good features and specs
are always going to cost more, especially
with the discrete graphics, you’ll have
to ask yourself what the priority is.
If you’ve also got a Huawei phone and want
to take advantage of the built in integrations
then it could be useful, but yeah basically
to summarise, a nice portable machine but
definitely on the more expensive side.
Let me know what you thought about the Matebook
X Pro laptop down in the comments, and if
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