Expert's Rating
Pros
- Large, pleasant keyboard and touchpad
- Excellent OLED display
- Ryzen 9 processor delivers strong CPU results
- RTX 4050 delivers respectable GPU grunt
Cons
- Forgettable design and build quality
- USB-C ports lack DisplayPort
- Power brick uses barrel plug instead of USB-C
- Mediocre battery life
Our Verdict
The Acer Swift X 16 has port problems, but strong performance and a beautiful OLED display make it a solid value.
Best Prices Today: Acer Swift X 16
Want a comfortable laptop with a large display that also packs great performance on a budget? Acer’s Swift X 16 is worth a look. Though it makes a few unforced errors in its port selection and ho-hum design, it redeems itself with AMD’s Ryzen 9 CPU with Nvidia RTX 4050 graphics—a powerful one-two punch that beats many competitors.
Looking for more options? Check out PCWorld’s roundup of the best laptops.
Acer Swift X 16: Specs and features
The Acer Swift X 16 differs from many of its competitors due to its AMD Ryzen 9 7940HS processor. We’ve reviewed several Ryzen 7000-series laptops so far, but this is the first Ryzen 9 7940HS on our bench. Its performance relative to Intel’s Core i7-13700H could make or break this laptop. Acer also packs RTX 4050 graphics, which is typical for a laptop of this size, but ups the ante with a high maximum graphics power of 100 watts.
- CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 7940HS
- Memory: 16GB LPDDR5
- Graphics/GPU: Nvidia RTX 4050 (100-watt graphics power)
- Display: 16-inch 3,200 x 2,000 120Hz non-touch OLED
- Storage: 1TB PCIe Gen4 SSD
- Webcam: 1080p
- Connectivity: 2x USB-C 3.2, 1x USB-C 3.2 Gen 1, 1x USB-A 3.2 Gen 1, 1x HDMI, 1x 3.5mm combo audio
- Networking: WiFi 6E, Bluetooth 5.2
- Biometrics: Fingerprint reader
- Battery capacity: 76 watt-hours
- Dimensions: 14.02 x 9.81 x .7 inches
- Weight: 4.2 pounds
- MSRP: $1,599.99
Pricing leans in Acer’s favor. The model I tested retails at just $1,599.99. That undercuts many similar laptops including the MSI Prestige 16 Studio, Lenovo Slim Pro 9i, and Dell XPS 15, to name a few. Shoppers can find similar hardware at a lower price in a handful of gaming laptops, but they’re usually budget models that weigh several pounds more than the Swift X 16.
Acer Swift X 16: Design and build quality

IDG / Matthew Smith
The Acer Swift X 16 is a simple metallic slab roughly 0.7 inches thick, 14 inches wide, and 10 inches deep. Like other Acer laptops, it has few design flourishes and is identified only by a small Acer logo on the back of the display lid. The Swift X 16 is only available in a dark gray color called “Iron.”
At this point, it’s fair to say understated simplicity is the Acer Swift line’s defining characteristic. Whether this fits your preferences is a matter of taste. It’s a good choice if you prefer a laptop that doesn’t draw attention.
The Swift X 16 is compact for a laptop with a 16-inch display. The display bezels are small on all sides and the laptop’s thickness of 0.7 inches is modest for the category. The same can be said for the Swift X 16’s weight of 4.2 pounds. A few alternatives, like the LG Gram SuperSlim, are thinner and lighter, but most competitors are at least as heavy as the Acer.
Acer’s build quality, much like its design, doesn’t stand out. It feels sturdy when handled at first brush with only slight flex in the display lid and lower chassis. However, the materials used feel thin and bend under more direct pressure. It’s fine for typical use and comparable to alternatives like the LG Gram SuperSlim and Asus VivoBook line, but not as luxurious as Dell’s XPS 15 and Apple’s MacBook Pro 16.
Acer Swift X 16: Keyboard, trackpad

Created with GIMP
IDG / Matthew Smith
A roomy display allows for a large keyboard, and the Acer Swift X 16 takes full advantage of this with a spacious keyboard layout that includes a numpad. Most keys are large and easy to find although some, like the numpad keys, are smaller than usual.
Key feel is acceptable. There’s ample key travel, but the bottoming action of each key feels vague and soft. Alternatives such as the Dell XPS 15 and Lenovo Slim Pro 9i offer a better tactile experience. The keyboard comes standard with a white LED backlight that offers two brightness settings.
A spacious touchpad stretches beneath the keyboard. It’s roughly 6 inches wide and 3.5 inches deep, making it one of the largest touchpads on a modern Windows laptop: the Razer Blade 16 is the only Windows laptop we’ve tested in 2023 that delivers a significantly larger touchpad.
There’s plenty of room for Windows multitouch gestures, and the touchpad’s surface is responsive. Due to its size, my palms occasionally touched the touchpad edges while typing, but I had no problem with unintended inputs.
My only gripe is the off-center touchpad layout, which shifts the touchpad towards the laptop’s left side. It forces me to hunch slightly towards that side which, after a few hours, adds a pinch in my left shoulder. This is common on laptops with a numpad, however, so it’s not a disadvantage compared to the competition.
Acer Swift X 16: Display, audio

IDG / Matthew Smith
The Acer Swift X 16 has a 16-inch OLED display with a 16:10 aspect ratio, 3,200 x 2,000 resolution, and 120Hz refresh rate. It’s a common OLED display panel found in several Acer Swift laptops as well as Asus Vivobook and ProArt laptops. Some competitors provide a higher display resolution: Dell’s XPS 15, for example, has a resolution of 3,456 x 2,160. It’s a small difference, though, and not one you’re likely to notice.
Image quality is outstanding. The OLED panel has an effectively infinite contrast level, a perfect minimum brightness of zero nits, and high color accuracy. It supports a wide color gamut, too, which spans 100 percent of sRGB, 97 percent of AdobeRGB, and 100 percent of DCI-P3. These are excellent results and translate to a vibrant, immersive, and lifelike image when viewing photos, movies, and games.
Brightness is the display’s weakness. The Swift X 16 hits a maximum SDR brightness of 377 nits. HDR boosts that to 534 nits, but HDR isn’t available on battery power. The Acer’s display is bright enough for use in a home office but can feel a bit dim in a room with sunlit windows and no light control (like a fishbowl corporate office or airport lobby).
The display’s excellence returns in motion clarity, however, as the 120Hz panel provides buttery-smooth motion with minimal motion blur. Fast-moving objects show good detail and scrolling images are mostly readable, though some small details (like a roughly 12-point font or fine textures in materials) will remain hard to see. PC gamers will be pleased.
Unfortunately, the Swift X 16’s speakers don’t live up to the display. They do fire upwards, which means the volume and tone of audio doesn’t change significantly depending on the surface the laptop is placed on, but the laptop’s maximum volume is low and audio sounds harsh. Less demanding media, like podcasts and YouTube videos, sound acceptable, but music can devolve into a buzzy mess. It’s not the worst I’ve heard, but also a long way from the best.
Acer Swift X 16: Webcam, microphone, biometrics
Acer packs a 1080p webcam in the Swift X 16’s thin top display bezel. It provides good sharpness and decent color reproduction. Image quality is nowhere near adequate for YouTube or Twitch, but it’s more than enough to handle video calls.
The same is true of the microphone array. It easily picked up my voice when I spoke at a normal volume at a distance three to four feet from the laptop. Some repetitive background noises, like a window air conditioner, were obscured. Less regular sounds, like typing on a mechanical keyboard, frequently came through. The microphone’s overall performance is nothing special but again suitable for video or audio calls.
A fingerprint reader is baked into the Swift X 16’s power button, but it didn’t work well in my testing. The fingerprint reader frequently failed to register my fingerprint and rarely worked on the first try. Any amount of wetness or grit on my finger—even the sweat of a soda can—threw it off. I prefer to use facial recognition on Windows laptops for exactly these reasons, but the Swift X 16 lacks this feature.
Acer Swift X 16: Connectivity

IDG / Matthew Smith
The Swift X 16 has a combination of modern and legacy USB connectivity. The left flank provides two USB-C 3.2 ports, while on the right flank you’ll find two USB-A 3.2 ports, a full-size HDMI output, and a micro SDcard reader. The only notable absence is wired Ethernet, but most of Acer’s competitors also ditch that port.
That’s a healthy list of connectivity, but there’s some issues. All the ports are situated relatively forward on the laptop’s flanks, which means the wires from those ports are more likely to be in your way.
While the laptop includes two USB-C ports, it ships with a 135W barrel-plug power adapter for charging. I would’ve preferred a USB-C power adapter, something nearly all of Acer’s competitors provide. The USB-C ports can power the laptop, though, so you can replace the default power brick with a USB-C charger.
I also noticed the USB-C ports lack DisplayPort Alternate Mode. I confirmed this with two portable monitors. Both powered on but failed to receive a video signal. That’s a problem if you own a USB-C monitor, portable or otherwise.
Wireless connectivity is great with support for Bluetooth 5.2 and the latest Wi-Fi 6E standard. Download speeds are excellent when connected to a Wi-Fi 6E router and generally match what’s possible over wired gigabit Ethernet, at least at short ranges. Of course, those who need a wired connection can achieve it through a USB-C to Ethernet adapter.
Acer Swift X 16: Performance
Unlike the smaller Acer Swift X 14, which relies on Intel processors, the Acer Swift X 16 offers AMD Ryzen 7000-series hardware. The laptop I tested had AMD’s Ryzen 9 9740HS, an eight-core, 16-thread processor with a base clock of 4GHz and maximum boost clock of 5.2GHz. It was paired with 16GB of RAM and a 1TB PCIe4 solid state drive.

IDG / Matthew Smith
Our tests begin with PCMark 10, a holistic system benchmark. It reports a strong score of 7,290, which defeats most professional performance laptops. Only the MSI Prestige 16 Studio defeated the Swift X 16, and only by a small margin. Acer’s strong performance in this benchmark hints at the respectable scores it receives in other tests.

IDG / Matthew Smith
Cinebench R15 is a short-duration yet heavily threaded CPU benchmark. It hits an excellent score of 2,644, which slightly defeats similar Intel-powered laptops like the Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Ultra and Dell XPS 15. The margin of victory is small enough that it’s unlikely to make-or-break your purchasing decision, but a win is a win.

IDG / Matthew Smith
The Acer Swift X 16 continues to score well in Handbrake, a long-duration multi-core CPU benchmark. It completes our test, which converts a movie into an .MKV format for use on an Android tablet, in 18 minutes and 9 seconds. That’s a solid result though, unlike the Swift X 16’s performance in Cinebench R15, it doesn’t break away from the pack.
Acer pairs the AMD Ryzen 9 processor with Nvidia’s RTX 4050 graphics. While this is the least expensive, least performant RTX 40-series hardware available from Nvidia right now, the Swift X 16 keeps it well-fed with a maximum graphics power
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