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Double Your Gaming Pleasure With HP's Dual-Screen Laptop

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Double Your Gaming Pleasure With HP's Dual-Screen Laptop

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We can start with the honorifics. HP calls the Omen X 2S the “world’s first dual-screen gaming laptop”—presumably with no apologies whatsoever to the Asus ZenBook Pro Duo (not a gaming machine) nor to Razer’s Blade R2 or its Project Valerie (technically triple-screen and not really in existence).

With that out of the way, we can move to definitions. What does dual-screen mean on a laptop? Banish thoughts of two monitors side by side like you might have on your desk; that’s simply impractical. Instead, what HP—and others before it—have done is embed a second screen into the chassis of the laptop, sliding the keyboard down to the bottom of the laptop’s base, leaving a space above the keyboard which allows for a small, second monitor to be embedded in the frame.

It’s a neat trick, and it sure does make for a striking appearance. If you didn’t look closely, you might well assume someone had laid their phone down across their open laptop to more easily multitask.

Courtesy of HP

And, to answer the obvious question, that’s entirely the point of the second screen: to give users—namely gamers—an easier way to do something they’d otherwise be doing on their phone without having to drop out of the full-screen gaming experience. What does that something look like? Really, it could be anything: A Discord feed. A Twitch stream. A game map or a list of cheat codes. It could even be a second game. You can also use this monitor to “zoom in” on a portion of the main screen, magnifying a particularly important portion of the window (such as a mini-map)—though HP notes this will not work with most first-person shooters due to Microsoft Windows limitations.

Outside of gaming, you can use it for anything you’d use a normal second screen for, though at just six inches in size and with 1920 x 1080 pixels of resolution, it makes for a tiny reading experience if you drop anything with text into it. It really does work like a second monitor—and a touchscreen, at that—and it’s fully managed within Windows just like any secondary display.

So is the second screen useful or just a gimmick? In truth, it lies somewhere in between. I didn’t get much out of it while actually gaming, but having a second screen to park Reddit feeds, YouTube videos, or BTC exchange rate charts has at least some value. While not immediately essential, it’s probably one of those things that slowly becomes more and more useful after you’ve had the system for a few months.

Courtesy of HP

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Source link : https://www.wired.com/review/hp-omen-x-2s/