Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro laptop review

An excellent fusion of portability, respectable performance and sublime screen quality

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro
(Image credit: © Future)

Digital Camera World Verdict

If you're after an ultra-thin and ultra-light Windows laptop that doesn't compromise on performance or display quality, the GeekBook X14 Pro is an excellent choice. Despite weighing only 2.2lbs, it's got the processing power to tackle demanding workloads, and you'll be viewing proceedings on the most color-accurate laptop screen I've ever tested. Considering the generous RAM and storage capacity, along with Geekom’s fair pricing, there's a lot to like about the X14 Pro and very little that counts against it.

Pros

  • +

    Stunning screen

  • +

    Healthy processing performance

  • +

    Amazingly thin and light

  • +

    Fair price

Cons

  • -

    Trackpad occasionally annoying

  • -

    Screen brightness stuck on our test laptop

  • -

    Weak speakers

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Looking for an exceptionally thin and light Windows laptop that doesn't compromise on performance? The Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro could be the answer. It weighs just 2.2lbs and is only 0.23 inches thick, yet even the base spec includes a versatile Intel Core Ultra 5 processor, a healthy 32GB of RAM and a 1 terabyte SSD. Keen photographers and creatives will also appreciate the high resolution OLED display that promises excellent image quality. Let's see if the GeekBook X14 Pro can live up to expectations…

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro

(Image credit: Future)

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro: Features

The X14 Pro comes in two configurations, though the only difference is the processor. The base config is based around an Intel Core Ultra 5 125H CPU which packs 14 cores and can run at up to 4.5 GHz. Opt for the top tier model and you get a powerful Core Ultra 9 185H CPU, which adds two additional cores while running at up to 5.1 GHz. Both configs include 32GB of RAM and a fast 1TB PCIe Gen4 SSD. Physical connectivity consists of two 40Gbps USB4 Type C ports with Power Delivery, along with an HDMI port and 3.5mm audio socket. And if that's not sufficient, Geekom also includes a USB-C dongle which adds an additional USB-C port, two further USB-A ports, another HDMI socket and even an RJ45 Ethernet port.

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro

(Image credit: Future)

Sometimes thin and light laptops don't prioritize screen quality, but that's not the case here. The X14 Pro boasts a premium 14-inch OLED display running at a crisp 2880 x 1800 resolution. It also has an advertised 100% DCI P3 color space coverage - there are high-end standalone monitors that struggle to match that - while maximum brightness is a respectable 450 nits. Gamers will appreciate the 120Hz refresh rate, though the X14 Pro isn't designed to be a gaming powerhouse, as there's no dedicated graphics processor - the CPU takes care of that.

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Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro

(Image credit: Future)

Despite its super-thin design, Geekom has managed to cram in a 72Wh battery, which it says is enough to power the laptop for up to 16 hours. When you're out of juice, the included (and surprisingly compact) gallium nitride charger provides 65 watts of charging power - enough to reach 80% charge in around 1 hour.

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro: Specifications

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CPU

Intel Core Ultra 9 185H 2.2GHz (up to 5.1GHz, 16 cores, 22 Threads)

Graphics

Intel Arc Graphics

RAM

32GB LPDDR5x

Screen

14-inch, 2.8K (2880x1800) OLED (450 nits, 120Hz, 100% DCI-P3)

Storage

1TB M.2 NVMe 4.0 SSD

Ports

1x USB-A 3.2 Gen 1, 2x USB-C (USB4), 1x HDMI, 1x 3.5mm headphone/mic combo jack

Wireless

Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.4

Camera

FHD webcam

Weight

1.0kg / 2.2lbs

Dimensions

310 mm x 213 mm x 5.8 mm / 12.2" x 8.4" x 0.23"

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro: Design & handling

As is often the case in the thin and light Windows notebook sector, Geekom has looked to Apple for design inspiration. Consequently the X14 Pro bears more than just a passing resemblance to a current MacBook Air, and it uses a similar CNC-machined magnesium alloy unibody chassis construction. The main deck of the laptop is surprisingly rigid with very little flex, considering its minimal thickness. Inevitably the wafer-thin screen feels flimsier, but that's unavoidable if you want ultimate thinness and lightness.

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro

(Image credit: Future)

The trackpad is a useful size, very smooth and responsive. My only gripe is that for some reason only the right-hand third of the trackpad area is clickable, making it a pain to perform click and drag movements, such as when painting or erasing in Photoshop. The keyboard is backlit, with customisable brightness. Key travel will always be restricted on a device this thin, and the click action is slightly rubbery for my liking, but I was still able to type quickly and comfortably. Sound quality is best described as adequate. A chassis this thin leaves hardly any room for speakers, so audio is completely lacking in bass. Even so, music doesn't sound uncomfortably harsh, and there's always the 3.5mm headphone jack when you want better audio fidelity.

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro

(Image credit: Future)

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro: Performance

Our GeekBook X14 Pro review sample came equipped with the faster of the two available CPU options: Intel's Core Ultra 9 185H. In my benchmark testing this returned a healthy Geekbench CPU score of 12297, comfortably outpacing my existing laptop of choice: Lenovo's Yoga Slim 7 Aura. The X14 Pro also outpaced the Slim 7 Aura in Cinebench 2024, scoring 618, and its 1TB SSD is extremely rapid, being capable of a blistering 7004MB/s read speed, with write speeds not much slower.

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro

(Image credit: Future)

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro

(Image credit: Future)

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro

(Image credit: Future)

This all translates to surprisingly potent performance for photo editing. Even when working with very high resolution raw files in Photoshop, the X14 Pro managed to stay snappy, adding filters with ease and showed no sign of slowing when the layer count reached double figures. For an even tougher test I broke out a 1.4GB, 852-megapixel stitched panorama TIFF file and attempted to enlarge it vertically by around 500 pixels using Generative Expand. This took an impressively rapid 27.5 seconds - compare that with the 45 seconds taken by the Slim 7 Aura laptop, which was already a respectable time relative to the 1 minute 23 seconds taken by my personal tower PC equipped with a 6-core AMD Ryzen 5 5600G (a much older CPU not designed with AI in mind). What's more, even with this respectable processing speed, the X14 Pro never got overly hot or noisy.

The twin 40Gbps USB4 ports are a very handy inclusion for when you want to import photos or videos, as with a USB4 Type-C card reader you could even max out the speed of a CFexpress 4.0 memory card. A modern NVMe portable SSD should also be able to run at its full speed when attached to one of the USB4 ports. It's a pity one of the two ports is used by the charger, but this is to be expected as Type-C chargers are now the norm.

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro: Screen quality

A laptop that'll be used for image editing needs a reliable, color-accurate screen as well as decent processing power. Thankfully, the X14 Pro’s 14-inch OLED display doesn't disappoint. Its super-crisp 2880 x 1800 resolution is high enough to blend individual pixels into each other, while vibrancy and contrast are incredibly high by virtue of this being an OLED display, rather than LCD. The only issue I had was that the brightness on our test laptop was stuck and did not respond to the keyboard controls, despite the on-screen brightness slider appearing to go up and down in response to the relevant keys.

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro

(Image credit: Future)

But to objectively assess the image quality of any display, you need a specialist device called a colorimeter; more commonly known as a monitor calibrator. Our Datacolor Spyder Pro is ideal for this job, so we can precisely assess just how good the X14 Pro’s screen really is.

Color Gamut

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro

(Image credit: Future)

Geekom states that the Geekbook X14 Pro should display 100% of the wide-gamut DCI-P3 color space, and our testing revealed this bold claim to be completely accurate. 95% coverage of the even more demanding AdobeRGB color space is just as impressive.

Color accuracy

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro

(Image credit: Future)

Right out of the box the X14 Pro manages an awesome color accuracy of Delta-E 0.48. And notice how every tested color patch is less than Delta-E 1? Many monitors and laptop screens are tuned for a cooler overall color balance, resulting in the cyan test patch being much less close to ideal color than the other patches. But that's not the case here: the X14 Pro is the most color-accurate laptop I've ever tested.

Screen uniformity

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro

(Image credit: Future)

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro

(Image credit: Future)

Color uniformity at 100% brightness is very good. However it becomes even better when brightness is reduced to a more comfortable 67%. Luminance (brightness) uniformity is also excellent, regardless of the overall screen brightness setting.

Brightness

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro

(Image credit: Future)

Unlike the brightness uniformity test where Datacolor's calibration software raises and lowers the display brightness, measuring the screen's overall brightness relies on manual brightness adjustment. As mentioned above, this wasn't working with our sample laptop, hence all the brightness cd/m2 values in this chart are essentially identical.

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro: Verdict

As tested with the faster of the two CPU options, the Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro costs $1,199. That makes it just $100 less expensive than a base 13-inch MacBook Air, but at that price the MacBook has half the RAM and half the storage of the X14 Pro. You'll also have to pay extra for a MacBook port dongle, whereas Geekom includes this for free with the X14 Pro. Geekom's pricing also compares well to other thin and light Windows laptops with equivalent CPU/RAM and storage specs.

Ultimately, no 13-inch laptop is an ideal tool for serious image or video editing - there simply isn't enough screen area for displaying multiple toolbars, palettes and a timeline, while also having a comfortably large preview pane. But if outright portability matters most to you, then the GeekBook X14 Pro is almost without compromise: it's got plenty of power, its screen is simply stunning, and it sips battery power. To manage all that in such an outrageously thin and light chassis is nothing short of incredible.

Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro

(Image credit: Future)

✅ Buy it...

  • You need the thinnest and lightest laptop possible....
  • ....which doesn't sacrifice performance.
  • You want flawless image quality

🚫 Don't buy it...

  • This will be your only editing machine - no 13-inch laptop is comfortable for image editing day-in, day-out.
Swipe to scroll horizontally

Features

There isn't room for some features, but there's everything most users really need

★★★★☆

Design

Sleek, subtly stylish and well made.

★★★★★

Performance

It excels at balancing respectable performance with great battery life, and the screen is superb

★★★★☆

Value

A great all-rounder for mobile image editing, and priced fairly

★★★★★

Ben Andrews

Ben is the Imaging Labs manager, responsible for all the testing on Digital Camera World and across the entire photography portfolio at Future. Whether he's in the lab testing the sharpness of new lenses, the resolution of the latest image sensors, the zoom range of monster bridge cameras or even the latest camera phones, Ben is our go-to guy for technical insight. He's also the team's man-at-arms when it comes to camera bags, filters, memory cards, and all manner of camera accessories – his lab is a bit like the Batcave of photography! With years of experience trialling and testing kit, he's a human encyclopedia of benchmarks when it comes to recommending the best buys. 

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