Expert's Rating
Pros
- Beautiful 240Hz OLED display with HDR
- Connectivity includes two Thunderbolt 4 ports
- Excellent CPU and GPU performance
- Slightly less expensive than competitors
Cons
- Drab exterior design fails to stand out
- Mediocre touchpad
- Speakers sound shrill at high volumes
- Lacks extras found on some competitive laptops
Our Verdict
The HP Omen Max 16 is a workmanlike entry into the 16-inch gaming laptop arena. It performs about as well as its peers, however, and ranks among the more affordable laptops with RTX 5080 graphics.
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The near-simultaneous appearance of new Intel Core Ultra 9 processors and Nvidia RTX 5080 mobile graphics has led to a burst of mid- to high-end gaming laptops with extremely capable hardware. The HP Omen Max 16 is among these, and while it performs about as well as its peers, it also struggles to set itself apart on pricing and design.
HP Omen Max 16: Specs and features
The core of the HP Omen Max 16 is the one-two punch of an Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX processor and Nvidia RTX 5080 mobile graphics. Both chips are new and deliver excellent all-around performance in their respective categories.
- Model number: 16-ah0043dx
- CPU: Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX
- Memory: 32GB DDR5-5600
- Graphics/GPU: Nvidia RTX 5080 (Max 175W with Dynamic Boost)
- NPU: Intel AI Boost up to 13 TOPS
- Display: 16-inch 2560×1600 240Hz OLED with HDR
- Storage: 2TB M.2 PCIe 4.0 SSD
- Webcam: 1080p 30fps camera with Windows Hello support
- Connectivity: 2x Thunderbolt 4 with USB-C and Power Delivery, 2x USB Type-A (10Gbps), 1x HDMI 2.1, 1x RJ-45 Ethernet, 1x 3.5mm headphone/microphone combo jack
- Networking: Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4
- Biometrics: Facial recognition
- Battery capacity: 83 watt-hours
- Dimensions: 14.04 x 10.59 x 0.98
- Weight: 6.1 pounds
- Operating System: Windows 11 Home
- Additional features: HyperX wireless connectivity
- Price: $3,339.99 MSRP
CPU and GPU aside, the HP Omen Max 16’s specification sheet is typical. The model I reviewed had a 16-inch display with 2560×1600 resolution, 32GB of memory, and a 2TB PCIe 4.0 solid state drive.
Connectivity is the only place where HP deviates from the norm, as the Omen Max 16 has two Thunderbolt 4 ports (some competitors have just one). It also has a HyperX wireless adapter for instant pairing with HyperX gaming hardware, which is a niche feature but potentially useful, as HyperX gaming peripherals are often rather good.
The HP Omen Max 16 I reviewed was priced at an MSRP of $3,339.99 at Best Buy, though it was reduced to $3,139.99 at the time I wrote this review. That’s expensive, but on the less expensive side for this caliber of hardware.
The HP Omen Max 16 is a capable, though rather dull, option in the highly competitive field of mid- to high-end gaming laptops with Nvidia RTX 50-series hardware.
HP Omen Max 16: Design and build quality

IDG / Matthew Smith
If imitation is the highest form of flattery, Alienware is no doubt blushing. HP’s Omen lineup has gradually morphed into something that looks much like older Alienware laptops. With the Omen Max 16, the inspiration comes across in the availability of black and white colorways, the simple lines with rounded corners, and, most notably, the similar choice of font used in the laptop’s “O16” badging.
However, the Omen Max 16 isn’t as extravagant as a typical Alienware machine. While the Omen Max 16 offers a customizable RGB-LED lightbar across the front, as well as an RGB-LED keyboard, the badging across the laptop’s exterior is rather tame. The Shadow Black colorway is particularly stealthy, as HP’s choice of matte black materials comes across as dull. Many competitors have their own flourishes: the Asus ROG Strix Scar 16 has a white LED display on its lid, for example.
That leaves the Omen Max 16’s design in a tough spot. It’s not unattractive, but it’s the least alluring of the new RTX 5080-powered gaming laptops PC World has reviewed to date.
On the plus side, HP hasn’t cut corners on build quality. The laptop chassis doesn’t allow much flex when picked up from one corner, and the materials don’t groan or creak. Opening and closing the laptop reveals only slight flex in the display, and the keyboard also resists flex unless specifically abused. Competitors like Alienware, Lenovo, and Asus provide solid build quality in this price bracket, too, but the Omen Max 16 is at least their peer.
HP Omen Max 16: Keyboard, trackpad

IDG / Matthew Smith
The HP Omen Max 16’s keyboard, much like the rest of its design, doesn’t look like much, especially when the RGB-LED backlight is not in use. This is mostly due to the keycaps, which have a rather old-fashioned bevel.
However, the Omen Max 16 strikes back in typing feel. The laptop offers good key travel and a firm, tactile bottoming action with a distinct scissor-switch slap. The Omen Max 16 isn’t going to match a mechanical keyboard, of course, but it feels crisp.
While the keyboard didn’t strike me as attractive, the customizable RGB-LED backlight helps alleviate that problem. It’s extremely bright and vibrant, as the keycaps have transparent edges that allow significant light through. The keyboard is also easy to customize through HP’s Omen Light Studio software.
The touchpad is less impressive. It feels responsive but only measures roughly five inches wide and three inches deep. That’s the minimum for a laptop. A couple of competitors, like the Asus ROG Strix Scar 16 and Razer’s Blade 16, offer a much larger touchpad surface.
HP Omen Max 16: Display, audio

IDG / Matthew Smith
Display quality is a perk for the HP Omen Max 16, though only if you spring for the top-shelf 16-inch OLED display. It has a resolution of 2560×1600, a maximum refresh rate of 240Hz, and supports variable refresh rates between 48Hz and 240Hz.
Going OLED has its strengths and weaknesses. OLED displays are typically glossy, which can make glare an issue, and not as bright as the Mini-LED displays found on competitors like the Asus ROG Strix Scar 16.
On the other hand, OLED provides top-tier contrast, color gamut, and motion clarity that are difficult to beat at any price. These advantages are well suited for a gaming laptop, so I prefer the HP’s OLED display over alternatives with an IPS Mini-LED or IPS LCD display.
The OLED display also supports HDR when the laptop is plugged into an outlet. It’s not going to match the HDR brightness of new desktop OLED monitors, but it’s not bad and looks vibrant enough to help HDR games pop.
The HP Omen Max 16’s speakers sound balanced at lower volumes but begin to sound shrill as the volume is increased. They’re fine for chill background beats or games that lean less on immersive audio, but you’ll want desktop speakers or a headset for anything more acoustically demanding. This is an area where the Asus ROG Strix Scar 16 has a significant advantage, as it has a powerful, crisp sound system.
HP Omen Max 16: Webcam, microphone, biometrics
HP ships the Omen Max 16 with a 1080p webcam and dual microphone array. Neither stands out, but both do the job. You can expect the webcam to deliver sharp, colorful video, and the microphone array will pick up your voice with plenty of volume.
The Omen Max 16 also has an IR camera for Windows Hello facial recognition. Most competitive laptops support this feature, too, but it’s always good to see. Facial recognition was fast and reliable in my testing, which, again, is also true of competitive laptops. A physical privacy shutter is included, too, to obstruct the webcam when desired.
HP Omen Max 16: Connectivity

IDG / Matthew Smith
You’ll find a healthy selection of ports along the HP Omen Max 16’s flanks.
A pair of Thunderbolt 4 ports, both of which support USB-C, are found on the left flank and joined by the 3.5mm combo headphone/microphone jack. The right flank has a single USB-A port. Another USB-A port is found on the rear, alongside HDMI 2.1 and 2.5Gbps Ethernet. The laptop also has a barrel plug power adapter on the rear, which connects to the included 330-watt power brick.
This is a good selection of ports for a modern gaming laptop. I also like that some ports are found on the rear of the laptop, which makes cable management easier. Helpfully, two of the three ports are those you’re most likely to use (HDMI and Ethernet) if the laptop spends a lot of time on a desk.
The Thunderbolt 4 ports also support USB-C power delivery. HP’s specifications don’t state the amount of power available, but it’s irrelevant, as the laptop’s maximum power draw likely exceeds what USB-C could provide. Still, it’s nice to have USB-C as a secondary option for charging the laptop if you happen to forget the brick.
Like most new laptops sold in 2025, the HP Omen Max 16 supports Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4. But here’s a twist: the laptop also supports instant wireless pairing with HyperX devices. I didn’t have a compatible HyperX device on hand to test this feature, however.
HP Omen Max 16: Performance
The hardware inside the HP Omen Max 16 I reviewed is similar to competitive laptops PC World has recently reviewed, which includes the Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 16, the Asus ROG Strix Scar 16, and the MSI Raider 18 HX AI. It pairs an Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX processor with an Nvidia RTX 5080 GPU. The Omen Max 16 also had 32GB of DDR5 memory and 2TB of PCIe solid state storage.

IDG / Matthew Smith
We kick things off with PCMark 10, a holistic system benchmark. Here, the Omen Max 16 reached a solid score of 8,321. That
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