Alienware has typically positioned itself as a premium brand of laptops and desktops for PC gamers. With the new Alienware 15 laptop, however, the Dell subsidiary is boiling down to the essentials in the hopes to reach a wider user base and offer a cheaper laptop.
For the lowest-end configurations, Alienware is digging in the parts bin for some older components, including AMD Ryzen 200 ("Hawk Point Refresh") and Intel Core Series 2 ("Raptor Lake") CPU options and GPUs starting with the RTX 4050 Laptop GPU in the United States, though some regions will start with the older RTX 3050 Laptop GPU.
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| Row 0 - Cell 0 | Alienware 15 | U.S. starting configuration |
CPU | Up to AMD Ryzen 7 260, Up to Intel Core 7 240H | AMD Ryzen 5 220 |
GPU | Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050 (6GB GDDR6, 70W) | Nvidia GeForce RTX 4050 (6GB GDDR6, 70W) |
RAM | 8GB - 32GB DDR5-5600 (All single DIMMs) | 16GB DDR5-5600 (16GB x 1) |
SSD | Up to 1TB PCIe NVMe M.2 Gen 4 | 512GB PCIe NVMe M.2 Gen 4 SSD |
Display | 15.3-inch, 1920 x 1200, 165 Hz, claimed 62.5% sRGB, AMD FreeSync, 300 nits | 15.3-inch, 1920 x 1200, 165 Hz, claimed 62.5% sRGB, AMD FreeSync, 300 nits |
Webcam | 720p, 30 FPS | 720p 30 FPS |
Networking | MediaTek MT7920 Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.2 | MediaTek MT7920 Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.2 |
Battery | 54 WHr, 4-cell (RTX 3050 and 4050) | 54 WHr, 4-cell |
Power Adapter | 130W (RTX 3050 and 4050) | 130W |
Those starting GPUs have just 6GB of VRAM, where as an update to the RTX 50-series options will get you a roomier 8GB.
I had access to a pre-production unit for early hands-on time, but I wasn't able to benchmark it (stay tuned for a full review for that). My initial opinions of it were that it didn't feel like an Alienware laptop. I'm used to Alienware laptops including some aluminum or premium plastics. While this system looks the part, with the Alienware head logo and rounded edges of the company's AW30 design language, the black polycarbonate lid and bottom cover feel a bit cheap. The bezels, in shiny plastic, feel like a relic of the old Dell G-Series, and the whole thing feels halfway between a standard Dell laptop and an Alienware machine.
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I'm not surprised to see plain, white keyboard backlighting, similar to the Alienware Aurora line. RGB lighting is about the easiest thing to cut.
Our hands-on unit, with an RTX 4050, had a simple rear foot. If you get an RTX 50-series GPU, the company adds the cryo-chamber found on the Alienware Aurora for some extra cooling.
The keyboard has 1.3mm of key travel, and only comes with white backlight, similar to the Alienware Aurora line. On the bright side, in a short hands-on time with it, I didn't notice much flex in normal typing. You also get a 180-degree hinge.I'm not looking forward to fully testing that display. Dell claims the 15.3-inch, 1920 x 1200 screen covers 62.5% of the sRGB gamut and offers 300 nits of brightness. That sounds about right — games and movie trailers looked dim and often washed out.
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On the bright side, Alienware hasn't skimped on ports here, with two USB Type-A ports, an Ethernet jack, HDMI 2.1, and a USB-C port with charging support and DisplayPort on the left side, while the right side has a 3.5 mm headphone jack and another Type-C port. These are slower, 5Gbps ports (USB 3.2 Gen 1 on all but the USB-C port on the left, which is USB 3.2 Gen 2) but if you're only using them for accessories, that shouldn't be a big deal.
Resident Evil Requiem seemed to run fine on the device at native resolution, even during a busy mid-game boss fight with tons of fire effects, but that game is extremely well-optimized. There's no unannounced silicon in this device, so we know what to expect, for the most part. But it didn't look amazing on the screen, which was dim and bland.
There will be more expensive versions, going up to an RTX 5060, 1TB of RAM, and either a Ryzen 7 or Intel Core 7 processor. Here's a table of configurations that Alienware provided:
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AMD Configurations | US List Price | Intel Configurations | US List Price |
Ryzen 5 / 16GB / 512GB / RTX 4050 | $1,299 | Core 5 / 16GB / 512GB / RTX 4050 (coming soon) | $1,349 |
Ryzen 7 / 16GB / 512GB / RTX 4050 | $1,399 | Core 7 / 16GB / 512GB / RTX 4050 (coming soon) | $1,449 |
Ryzen 7 / 16GB / 512GB / RTX 5050 | $1,459 | Core 7 / 16GB / 512GB / RTX 5050 | $1,509 |
Ryzen 7 / 16GB / 1TB / RTX 5060 | $1,849 | Core 7 / 32GB / 1TB / RTX 5060 | $2,299 |
It is understandable why Alienware is going for a cheaper laptop. Notebooks are very expensive right now, and the budget category has all but evaporated. For real deals, you often have to go several generations back on at least the CPU. This should widen the number of people considering Alienware in this market, and people who buy the entry-level system this time around may consider an Aurora or an Area-51 in a few years, alongside any of the mice, headsets, or keyboards that Alienware also makes.
The price is questionable. It's unclear what promotions may come and drop the price down the line — perhaps holiday or back to school sales. If a less premium brand dropped a laptop like this at this price, it might actually seem downright reasonable, given the current state of components. In fact, if some of Alienware's rivals, or even Dell itself under the G-series brand, had dropped this exact laptop two years ago and this was now the going price, I think some people would think it was more agreeable. But Alienware launching a less premium notebook with old parts now might make it seem expensive for what you get, or at least feel off-brand. And some of those higher tiers are still pricey, with an Intel system with an RTX 5060 passing $2,000.
It does risk making Alienware look a bit less premium. I'm very curious to see the mainstream reception to this notebook. Dell ended its G-Series gaming laptops, which were cheaper and technically not affiliated with Alienware, when the company rebranded its laptops in 2025. But hey, at least something is coming out aimed at the masses.






