Dell XPS 14 Review: Intel Core Ultra X7, OLED Display, Premium Build
Dell XPS 14 Review: Intel Core Ultra X7, OLED, Premium Build

Dell has updated the XPS 14 model with the new Intel Core Ultra X7 358H processor. This laptop belongs to the high-end ultra-portable class, designed for people who need to balance performance and mobility.

Starting at Rs 2,05,990 for the base configuration, the top-tier variant that we tested comes with the Core Ultra X7 358H, 32GB LPDDR5X RAM, 1TB SSD, and a 2.8K OLED touch display. We spent a short time with this configuration, putting it through daily tasks such as video and photo editing, streaming, light creative work, web browsing, and light gaming. Here are our early impressions.

Design and Display

The XPS 14 makes an immediate impression with its CNC-machined aluminium chassis and a Corning Gorilla Glass 3 palm rest. The build quality feels solid and premium, and at 1.36 kg for the OLED variant, it is easy to carry around. The slim profile, measuring just 14.62mm in height, is remarkable for a 14-inch laptop with this level of hardware inside. Dell's sustainability credentials are also notable here, with the company claiming that 75% of the aluminium used in the top and bottom covers is recycled.

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The 2.8K OLED touch display is the clear highlight. Colours appear vivid and punchy, and blacks look deep, as expected from an OLED panel. The 120Hz refresh rate makes scrolling and UI animations feel smooth in day-to-day use. The Gorilla Glass Victus cover glass on the OLED adds a layer of reassurance for durability. We will assess colour accuracy and brightness more thoroughly in the full review.

Performance and Software

The Core Ultra X7 358H is a 16-core chip and, combined with 32GB of LPDDR5X RAM and a 1TB PCIe NVMe SSD, the system handled everything we threw at it without hesitation. Multitasking across dozens of browser tabs, editing images, videos and documents, streaming 4K content, and even some light gaming all felt fluid. App launch times were near-instant, and SSD speeds were consistently responsive.

The integrated Intel Arc B390 GPU, which draws on 18GB of shared memory, adds a layer of graphics capability beyond what typical integrated graphics offer. In our brief testing, it handled light creative tasks and casual workloads comfortably. We are curious to see how it holds up under sustained creative or gaming loads, which we will explore in the full review.

The onboard NPU, also backed by 18GB of shared memory, is central to the laptop's Copilot+ PC designation, enabling AI-accelerated tasks locally. The Home version of Windows 11 was preloaded, and all Copilot+ features, such as AI-based image creation and live captioning, worked well in our initial tests. Also, a 4K HD webcam with 8 MP resolution and facial recognition support worked flawlessly. Four speakers with Dolby Atmos were commendable for a machine of its size.

Battery and Connectivity

The port selection is selective yet deliberate. The laptop features three USB-C ports with Thunderbolt 4, DisplayPort 2.1, and Power Delivery support; however, users relying on traditional ports would need a hub. With Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 6.0, the XPS 14 meets all the latest wireless requirements. During our testing, Wi-Fi performance was reliable and fast.

The XPS 14 includes a 70Whr battery, and Dell says you can get up to 31 hours of life with the display set to 2K resolution. Our review unit with an OLED panel did well during a mixed-use test, including web browsing, streaming media, and productivity tasks, lasting for almost the entire day. The included 100W USB-C charger is small, and charging from empty went quickly.

Our Early Verdict

Based on our initial time with it, the Dell XPS 14 looks like a strong case for premium thin-and-light laptops. Given the hefty price tag of Rs 2,05,990, the build quality is superb, the OLED screen is truly stunning, and the hardware setup, especially the pairing of the Intel Arc B390 graphics and NPU, along with generous shared memory, results in a system that outperforms standard ultrabooks by far. The AI-ready capabilities of Copilot+, coupled with the entire package, make this laptop a strong recommendation at first glance. Whether the battery life holds up to Dell's ambitious claims and how the Arc GPU performs under sustained workloads are the key questions we will answer in our full review.

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