ASUS ProArt P16 Gets a Massive Upgrade: OLED Brilliance Meets RTX 5090 Power
ASUS has just announced the most powerful version of their ProArt P16 to date, and honestly, it feels like they’ve taken a creator’s wish list and checked every box.
The headliner here is the pairing of AMD’s Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 processor, complete with a built-in NPU for AI acceleration with NVIDIA’s GeForce RTX 5090 Laptop GPU. Yes, you read that right: RTX 5090 performance in a laptop chassis that weighs just 4.3 pounds and measures 0.59 inches thin.
Why This Matters
For creators, this isn’t just spec sheet flexing. The new ProArt P16 is capable of handling real-time 4K and 8K multi-track editing, AI-powered effects, denoising, upscaling, and high-bit-depth color grading without choking. ASUS claims up to 24GB of VRAM on tap, meaning projects that used to demand a desktop workstation can now travel with you.
The Display Creators Asked For
Equally impressive is the debut of ASUS’s new Lumina Pro OLED touchscreen. It’s not just bright up to 1,600 nits HDR peak brightness, but factory-calibrated with Delta E < 1 accuracy, Pantone validated, and rocking a 120Hz refresh rate with VRR support. Motion looks seamless, colors stay true, and eye strain is reduced thanks to anti-reflection coating and TÜV Rheinland-certified blue light reduction. In short: this is ASUS’s best laptop display yet.
AI Tools on Deck
Since this is a Copilot+ PC, the ProArt P16 comes with built-in AI features. ASUS’s own StoryCube (smart asset management) and MuseTree (AI-assisted idea generation) are included, while the RTX 5090 provides the horsepower to actually make those tools fast and useful.
Designed for Real Portability
Despite the workstation-class guts, ASUS managed to keep the chassis thin and light. You still get a wide spread of I/O (USB4, HDMI 2.1, SD Express 7.0), WiFi 7, and even their customizable DialPad for fine creative control.
Availability
The new ProArt P16 (model H7606WX-XH99T) will roll out in Q4 2025. No word yet on final pricing, but considering the hardware inside, don’t expect it to be cheap.
Silicon Foxx take: This is ASUS signaling that the line between “creator laptop” and “true mobile workstation” doesn’t really exist anymore. If you’re serious about editing or content creation but don’t want to be chained to a desk, this could be the laptop to watch this year.




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