Customer Ratings & Reviews
- Model:
- 14-fb0013dx/9Q4B5UA#ABA
- |
- SKU:
- 6569023
Customer reviews
Rating 4.2 out of 5 stars with 93 reviews
(93 customer reviews)Rating by feature
- Battery Life3.8
Rating 3.8 out of 5 stars
- Speed4.4
Rating 4.4 out of 5 stars
- Display4.7
Rating 4.7 out of 5 stars
Customers are saying
Customers are satisfied with the OLED display, performance, and build quality of the Transcend 14" laptop. Many appreciate its portability and the fast SSD, while some found the speakers and screen size less impressive. Positive feedback frequently highlighted the excellent performance in games and the comfortable keyboard. However, a few users wished for louder speakers and a larger screen.
This summary was generated by AI based on customer reviews.
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Build quality needs some work
||Posted . Owned for 2 weeks when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.After 2 weeks of use, I would say it works well. I bought the laptop mostly for work (ArcGIS) and it responds quickly, much better than Parallels on my Mac. The only issue was the fan was always on and kind of distracted me. And the build quality needs to improve, especially around the camera. Every time I lift the lid from the camera area, I feel like the layers are gonna fall apart (cracks in between).
I would recommend this to a friendBrand response from HP Team
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- Pros mentioned:Battery life, Build quality, Oled displayCons mentioned:Speakers
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Almost hit the landing
|Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.The HP Omen Transcend 14 is a new player in the world of 14 inch gaming laptops. The challenge is how do you get a great performing laptop, in a minimal size, and one that won’t turn into a jet engine/heater when hardware is pushed. With the Transcend, there were some great, and some okay/good to one bad feature. Out of the box you get the laptop, a 140 W USB-C power adaptor, and inserts. On my test, I was at about 15% battery life, plugged in the plug, ad had about 65% in about 30’ish minutes, so their claim of 50% in 30 minutes is pretty on point. I never heard of a laptop fast charger, so it was a pleasant surprise. The laptop has a nice aluminum body. I do prefer it over plastic, but it’s still a fingerprint magnet. After one day of use, it has smudges on either side of the touch pad, and on the outside from me holding it to move it to my bag and around the house. I wonder if the white color has this problem. The design of the laptop is almost muted. There’s nothing that screams it’s a gaming laptop. The cover simply has the OMEN branding, and that’s it. There isn’t any RGB lighting on the exterior. You can even turn off the keyboard RGB lighting in the Omen gaming hub. I like this fact. When I’m home and playing in low lighting, I can turn RGB lights on, so that’s a plus. In terms of ports you have a USB-C on the back which is for charging, and a HDMI 2.1 right next to it. One of the biggest disappointments is that you can’t fully use the RTX 4060 on it’s own. On the Omen gaming hub, you have the option of using the integrated graphics card for battery life, or a hybrid for when you need that extra bit of juice. I would have liked to see a way to use the GPU on its own. So using the HDMI 2.1 port to an external monitor is the only way to use the RTX 4060 on its own. The drawback is of course unless you have a OLED gaming monitor, you won’t have that lovely screen to look at. The ports in general were placed well, I would have liked to see one more USB-C port. You get 2 USB-A ports on the right side. I’m glad that companies haven’t completely abandoned the good old USB-A yet. You have 1 USB-C on the left side and a headphone jack. I do appreciate that you have a headphone jack. Unfortunately for me, all my gaming headphones are wireless, so I think in the next iteration, they can remove it and add another USB-C. Considering that this laptop touts the Intel Core Ultra 7 which is more AI focused, I’m surprised that there isn’t even a micro SD card slot for content creators. I get that you can plug in an external HDD or any other alternative, but it just detracts from the whole portability aspect. The hinges on the laptop seem sturdy, but there is some wobble on the screen when opened. One of the key selling points on the Transcend 14 is the OLED screen. It’s a 2.8K OLED. I didn’t even know they made a 2.8K. The screen is absolutely gorgeous. As with most OLED’s, you get the dark distinct blacks, and bright colors throughout. I tested with a few games and a few movies. With movies is where it really shined. The only caveat is that the screen is glossy. I think this is the only laptop I have with a glossy screen, or THIS glossy. In a dark room with the keyboard RGB lights on, it’s a bit distracting, but you can always turn them off. You also have a high refresh rate, but you’ll have to go into Windows setting to set it to 120hz. The screen is also bright. At 500 nits, you see the colors pop. All in all, a great screen. The Hyper X speakers are great, but not excellent. As in most cases, you’ll probably use headphones when gaming or watching a movie, but when it needs recharging, it’s time to get some life out of them. I would say they sound great, but not the greatest bass. The keyboard is comfortable to type on, and it’s not super clicky, so you can remain incognito when out and about at your favorite café. The touchpad is large and responsive. You get multitouch gestures like with just about every other modern laptop. The surface area is responsive. I do wish there was a way to disable it when using a mouse so you don’t accidentally touch it when typing. (Minor gripe). Just about everybody will use a separate gaming mouse so the touchpad becomes a secondary means. The one impressive thing that I found is that even when on performance mode, and hybrid GPU, I don’t hear the laptop turning into a jet engine. There are vents on the back of the base of the laptop, and vents underneath where you can see two of the fans. For most of the my testing, the laptop stayed cool. Even when I cam close to ultra settings on my games test, I didn’t feel the laptop turning into a heater. That’s either a result of great engineering for the cooling and or the fact that you can’t use the RTX 4060 at full blast. I think it was a conscious decision to help maintain battery life and prevent overheating. One of the biggest flaws is that you can’t add more RAM. I guess in a small package, you get limited spacing. Most games still don’t require 32 GB of ram, but this fact does limit the future state of this laptop. The webcam is a good 1080p webcam. You have the option of using Windows hello which I like a lot. The image from the camera is still grainy, and the video recording is limited to 30FPS. Even setting the flicker reduction to 60 hz, doesn’t change much. It’s good enough for virtual meetings or something basic, but for streaming, a nice 4K camera is recommended. The mic is also just good. You get a bit of that echo effect, and once again, it’s good for meetings, but beyond that, your gaming headset mic is probably much better in terms of quality. In my actual gaming tests, I immediately saw some of the shortcomings with the laptop. I couldn’t run any of the 2 modern games from 2023 at ultra settings without losing framerates and stability. On high settings, I was able to get a range from 50-60 fps. Once I turned ray tracing on, I needed to adjust a lot of the settings to make up for the difference in stability. I tested a game from 2015 on ultra high, and I couldn’t get more than 78 fps during a benchmark test so yeah. I love seeing ray tracing in action, but sometimes you just want a great performing game with smooth playability. I mean, the games looked great on high settings with ray tracing, but couldn’t get ray tracing and ultra in the same settings. My other laptop that has a 4070 with 32 gigs of ram, and a mux switch was able to handle the games on ultra with ray tracing, but it sounded like a jet engine was about to take off on the runway, so there’s that. I’m just as happy playing on a quiet laptop that doesn’t turn into a room heater with graphics that still look on par. On a side note, I played a flight simulator, and that’s where I saw the oled screen really shine. In the night time settings, you could see the beautiful color detail against the blackness of the night sky. I had the settings at ultra, and the 4060 handled it pretty well. There were some few occasional frame dips, but nothing that really took me out of the game. All in all, HP’s Transcend 14 is a nice start into the world of 14 inch gaming laptops. The design engineers and hardware engineers have found a nice way to minimize the footprint of the laptop while achieving good cooling and low fan noise. Some of the decisions to include or omit certain ports was a bit of ahead scratcher, and the lack of a mux switch (Mux switch = let’s you use the gpu only) is another missed opportunity. The screen is excellent. The overall build quality is almost top notch. All in all, a great 1st gen entry. For 2025’s HP Omen Transcend 14, I hope to see some more post purchase upgrade options.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Processor speed
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Get ready to be WOWED!
||Posted . Owned for 1 month when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.This laptop is amazing. The keyboard light up feature is very nice. The Intel core ultra seven very efficient for what I needed to do would recommend to anyone looking to get into the cyber field.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Build quality, Oled display, PerformanceCons mentioned:Speakers
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Great start for HP Omen14inch debut
|Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.HP's newest laptop joins the growing segment of portable laptops in the 14-inch category. From a glance, HP has come out swinging and for the most part, they do land some serious blows. Quick speck glance: 14-inch 120hz VRR IMAX, EyeSafe Certified OLED Panel 2880x1800 Resolution Intel Ultra i7 Processor with support of Intel AI Boost RTX 4060 (65w) 16GB of Soldered LPDDR5X Ram 1TB NVME Drive that can be upgraded Omen Tempest Cooling Technology 140w Compact USB C Charger with quick charge from 0% to 50% in 30mins. Four Zone RGB Keyboard Designed it’s a good-looking laptop, and as for the build quality, it’s a solid aluminum build. Overall I like the design style HP went with. There is a decent amount of port selection. You get x2 USB C Thunderbolt, a full-size HDMI port, and x2 full-size USB A ports. The keyboard does have this translucent look to it that you either hate it or love it. I do like the looks of it but with the darkened keys it does make it hard to see some of the keys. The RGB is divided into 4 zones for RGB color customizations. As for the typing experience the travel depth is decent, but the keys just feel slippery, which I end up making more mistakes. For gaming, they should be fine. As for the built-in speakers, they do sound nice but overall volume output could use a boost. There’s not much to say about this beautiful display that hasn’t been said about good-quality OLED displays. I believe this might be the first OLED panel to support VRR which leads to smoother gameplay. Compared to my Asus Zenbook which has an OLED panel the Omen 14 has a brighter panel that you can tell right away. For the Asus, I would need to increase the brightness to around 65% for it to get as bright as the Omen which is around 50%. Battery life is where HP ends up stumbling. In balanced mode I was able to get right around 6 hours of battery of mixed usage of browsing the web, watching YouTube and Netflix videos. I had high hopes with Intel's latest chips but so far they’re not as efficient with battery life even with the AI capabilities. One of the games I downloaded right away to see how capable the Omen 14 Transcend is was Forza Motorsport. This game is GPU extensive; even with high-end cards like 4090, it’s brutal. This is one of the games that is confusing at first to adjust the settings and depending on some settings you end up with poor performance. With everything max at the internal resolution it was barely reaching 30fps. After tinkering with it for a while, I found a good compromise between quality and performance with a near-constant 60+ fps in performance mode, with balanced mode hovering around 50+ fps for races that have intensive effects like heavy rain with the daytime set in the evening The only time I did experience some dips was when multiple cars were present in the screen, like at the beginning of the race or passing multiple cars that would end causing some frame dips. I was impressed with the CPU temps staying below 90c in performance mode, and balanced mode same settings hovering around low to mid 60c. GPU temps were even much lower usually hovering around 65c in performance mode with balanced mode right around 55c. All while the majority of the heat is around the top row of keys going towards the back of the laptop, with no side vents you don’t have to worry about having your hand being warmed from the blast of hot air from the right side since all of the hot air is being pushed out from the rear vents of the laptop. For less demanding races without intensive graphical effects like weather effects expect even lower temps and higher fps. I’m sure of could have achieved higher fps by dropping the quality even lower and the resolution, but I’m satisfied with 60fps. The dips weren't significant enough for me to noticed. I think it’s a good compromise that gives you a good gaming experience. As for fan noise, they were around 50db in performance mode and balanced mode coming in right around 45db. It’s still loud but tolerable in my opinion. If you tend to game with headphones on you won’t notice the fan noise at all. For less demanding tasks you barely will hear the fan noise at all. Forza Motorsport Graphics Settings: Dynamic Render Quality: High Resolution: 2560x1440 Nvidia DLSS: Balanced Performance Target: unlocked frame rate Anisotropic Filtering: 16x Raytracing Quality: Full reflections + RTAO RTAO Quality: Medium Shadow Quality: Medium Cebemap reflection Quality: Medium Car Model Quality: High Car livery Quality: High Windshield Reflection Quality: Medium Mirror Quality: Medium Track Texture Quality: Medium Particle Effects Quality: Medium Motion Blur Quality: High Lens Flare Quality: High VRAM Usage: 5,888/7,972 MB Overall I’m very happy with the Omen 14 Transcend it’s a good-performing laptop that is not going to run everything at max settings, but if you take the time to adjust the settings you can achieve some great results without having to sacrifice too much quality, especially for this gorgeous OLED panel. As I said before battery life is a disappointment, I did expect more from the Intel Core Ultra 7 1555H. It’s a powerful CPU but hopefully, with a couple of updates, it can be optimized to increase battery life. Technology has come a long way to see this type of performance on a thin laptop that years ago would have been held back by thermals, or weak CPU/GPU chipsets to keep it from burning itself up. If you’re looking for a thin light portable laptop that won’t be a burden to carry around, but can still game with an ok battery life the HP Omen 14 Transcend is worthy of consideration.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Oled display
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Good purchase
||Posted . Owned for 3 weeks when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.So far I love this computer. The OLED screen makes it so everything runs smoothly.
I would recommend this to a friend Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Recommend for architecture students
||Posted . Owned for 6 months when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Bought it for Archie school in the fall and I has handles every single heavy software that I have thrown into it
I would recommend this to a friend- Cons mentioned:Screen size
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Clear and smooth
||Posted . Owned for 3 weeks when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Love this laptop overall, I wish I wouldve got the larger screen size however; this was perfect for me!
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Battery life, Build quality, Oled display
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Light, Travel-Friendly and a Stunning Display
|Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.The HP Omen Transcend 14 gaming notebook is among the premium class of laptops that provide a very good gaming experience. The model reviewed here came with the Intel Core Ultra i7 processor with 16 GB of memory, 1 TB of NVMe storage and Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 graphics card (you can go up to an i9/32Gb/2TB/RTX 4070). In all configurations you'll get one Thunderbolt 4 port, a USB-C and two USB-A ports, a combo audio jack, and an HDMI port, which is more than reasonable for something with a profile as thin as the Omen. Also included is Intel Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4. In addition to its impressive performance, the HP Omen Transcend 14 is also incredibly portable. Weighing only 3.6 lbs and measuring just 0.7 inches thick, it's easy to take with you wherever you go. Whether you're gaming on the go or setting up at a friend's house for a LAN party, this notebook won't weigh you down. Keyboard has a good feel with decent travel and solid feel with no flex. The touchpad is oversize for a gaming laptop and works well. There's a bit of a wobble in the display, however overall build quality is solid -- no complaints there. I found the understated styling very much to my liking. If you choose not to illuminate the RGB keyboard, it looks like any other premium notebook. The sound quality of the built-in speakers is good, though not exceptional. Another great trait of this gaming notebook is its low noise and low heat output. Even during intense gaming sessions, the fans remain relatively quiet, ensuring a distraction-free experience and not raising the ire of anyone who might happen to be nearby. Additionally, the notebook stays cool even under heavy load, proving its cooling system is quite efficient. With 16 GB of RAM and 1 TB NVMe storage, this notebook offers ample space for all your games and files, which is a good thing as neither component is upgradeable as they are soldered into the mainboard. For me though, the standout feature of this gaming notebook is its 14-inch 2.8K OLED display. The display is absolutely gorgeous. With a resolution of 2,880 x 1,800 pixels, it offers stunning visuals that are crisp and vibrant. The display also boasts an impressive 0.2ms response time, ensuring smooth and lag-free gameplay. The screen supports variable refresh rates from 44-120 Hz. While there are many positives about the HP Omen Transcend 14, there are a few potential drawbacks to consider. The first is that the Omen is slightly slower than some other notebooks with this GPU as the RTX 4060 in the Transcend has its power draw limited to 80w TDP (the mobile 4060 has a max TDP of 115w). HP states this is due to the thinner and lighter frame, but my conclusion is that this has something to do with the relative quietness and the lower heat output of the Transcend 14 compared to its competition. I don’t believe it’s enough to change your gameplay experience, but you may see a few FPS less than some of the Omen's competitors in a benchmark test. For example, playing Cyberpunk 2077 with Ray Tracing Low preset and DLSS set to Performance, framerate was around 45 FPS, which for me is fine in this type of game. Ultra preset w/o RT yielded almost the same results. To run Cyberpunk at 60 FPS required medium/no RT preset. Tweaking with custom settings may yield better results, but for me, I didn’t have any problems with the gameplay experience using any of those settings, as the graphics were still amazing, but what works for me may not satisfy everyone. That’s going to be the case with any notebook with an RTX 4060. If you want better, you’re going to have to spend more for something with an RTX 4070. An older game, Far Cry 6 maintained 60 FPS and above at the highest preset. Helldivers 2 was able to run at 60 FPS using the Ultra preset and customizing a few of the settings. I found the battery life was “OK” for a fairly high-powered ultra-portable. HP claims the 6-cell, 71Wh Li-ion polymer battery offers up to 8 hours and 15 minutes of gameplay (or up to 13 hours of video playback). I didn’t tweak it for maximum battery life, and I didn't run the battery down to zero, but I did run a 1 hour 40-minute video at 2K resolution. The Omen’s battery went down from 100% to 79%, which to me extrapolates to around the 8-hour mark -- far short of HP’s claims. Again, tweaking the setting may yield better results. On the plus side, support for fast charging means the Transcend 14 can recharge up to 50% of capacity in as little as 30 minutes. Overall, my experience with the HP Omen Transcend 14 has been a very positive one. The powerful hardware, stunning display, and portable design makes it a standout choice for gamers on the move, and the minimalist design and high portability makes it an effective work and travel laptop. Whether you're a casual gamer, a hardcore enthusiast, or you need top-shelf hardware for creative tasks, the Omen Transcend 14 notebook should be on your short-list to check out.
I would recommend this to a friend Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Phenomenal
||Posted . Owned for 8 months when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Amazing unit. Handles most if not all games without any issues. Throne and liberty PVP and overwatch played on the best quality.
I would recommend this to a friend- Pros mentioned:Battery life, Build quality, PerformanceCons mentioned:Speakers
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
So Good with a couple of big Flaws
|Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Let me start with this the build quality on this laptop is amazing. It’s thin, it’s light, it’s quiet and has great performance. It has an amazing looking screen. In most cases I would say this is the perfect laptop but it has a couple of flaws that really drag it down. Let me start with the negatives and we will end on the positives. The first is the speakers, and let me say they are not good if you are in a quiet environment they are not bad but if you start some games and the fans kick on it can be hard to hear, and the kicker is the fans never get too loud unless your really trying to max out the laptop. The next issue I had is the screen reflectivity it’s not great, it can be hard to see if you have a light source in front of the screen. I have trouble using it in my kitchen because the sunlight causes massive glares. The screen gets decently bright and in darker environments it looks great. But it can be hard to use in very bright areas. The last issue is the battery life and yes I know this is a gaming pc, and that is true but that is where the small size of the laptop I think affects this one over a bigger one. They have to cram so much and think about the thermals that it ends up with a smaller battery where you do feel how fast it drains. Doing work related tasks or just watching media I was able to get about 5 hours of battery life. Now let’s go on to the positives, the size and portability is awesome it’s a big enough screen that you can comfortably work or watch but small enough to fit in a backpack, it’s also pretty light so you don’t feel like your carrying a brick around. The screen is amazing the colors and picture quality looks great. I ditched my tablet to start watching movies on here because it looks so good. And the last thing is performance this thing is powerful for how small and compact it is. Very game I tested played great, it’s not a very loud laptop also which is great. If you are someone that tends to just use your laptop at home and it’s somewhat dark in your house this is definitely the laptop I would recommend.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Battery life, Oled display, PerformanceCons mentioned:Screen size, Speakers
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Clear, vivid display, fast and powerful
|Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.The 14” Transcend is a powerhouse of a portable gaming laptop with a clean, high-end aesthetic. It has an all-aluminum metal exterior with smooth rounded edges that is quite thin at a little over 0.5 inch, and it weighs just over 3.5 lbs. While the black matte finish picks up and holds onto fingerprints easily, it’s also available in white which may not show them as readily. There are also a few different build packages, and this is the mid-range configuration. This build runs on the 115H Intel Core Ultra 7 Series processor with 16 cores, 4.8 GHz max, and 24 MB of L3 cache. It comes with a 1 TB Gen 4 NVMe SSD pre-installed and 16GB of LPDDR5X RAM soldered to the motherboard (not upgradable). The discrete GPU is an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 with 8 GB GDDR6 RAM. These specs are decent for gaming at mid to high quality settings and would work for non-gaming applications as well, though I personally find the screen size a bit cramped for creative work like video editing software. Interestingly, there is no MUX switch option to use only the discrete GPU, just hybrid or integrated graphics mode are available, though this omission helps to extend its battery life. On a full charge, during casual use for web browsing, work, and watching streaming video content, I was able to get just under 4 hours of use on battery power in 'hybrid' mode. While gaming this was cut down to 1 to 1.5 hrs depending on the quality settings. The laptop handles itself well for most games but may feel a little sluggish at ultra video settings. In first-person shooters like Counterstrike 2 I was able to achieve 100-120 fps consistently without running into performance issues like stuttering and frame drops, though in RPGs like Path of Exile the framerates generally ran between 60-80 fps without exceeding that threshold. On the right-hand side of the laptop are two USB-A 3.2 Gen 2 ports in the back corner with one featuring sleep charging. On the left hand side is a Thunderbolt 4 (USB-C) port and combo mic/headphone jack. Along the back is a second USB-C 3.2 Gen 2 port and HDMI 2.1 output port. The HDMI and Thunderbolt ports can both be used to connect external displays. As well, both USB-C ports can be used for charging with the 140Watt adapter or with Power Delivery chargers. Allegedly, you’ll get better charging performance out of the port located at the back of the laptop where it’s neatly out of your way, however, in my testing, I was able to get about 50% charge in just 30 minutes using either port. On the underside, two rubber feet span the width of the laptop at the front and back and two exhaust fans cool the device off during heavy usage. While the grille vent appears to cover a large portion of the base, the intake cutouts are only located above the fans and vent out the back of the laptop. The fans do a great job at keeping the laptop cool during heavy usage and aren’t super loud either, which means you can actually use the onboard speakers during gameplay and still hear them. The stereo speakers are positioned on the bottom towards the front corners and while the sound quality is pretty good, I feel they sometimes sound a little muffled. For that reason I prefer using headphones with this laptop. The edge-to-edge OLED screen has a 14” diagonal with thin bezels, 120Hz max refresh rate, 500 nits max brightness (HDR), 2 ms response time, and max resolution of 2880 x 1800 (2.8k at 16:10 aspect ratio). The screen quality is the standout feature with deep, true blacks, and vibrant saturated colors across 100% DCI-P3 or 99% sRGB colorspace. While the glossy finish makes glare and reflections worse in bright lighting, it’s not an issue in a darker environment, plus it’s easy to overlook that in favor of the fineness in detail, sharpness, and accurate colors of the 240 PPI display. As tempting as it is to tap the screen though, it is not touch-capable. Connectivity-wise, it supports WiFi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3 for super-fast connections to external wireless devices like headphones and mobile devices and when used with headphones experiences lag-free syncing with video content. Download speeds were fast and reliable providing an excellent and smooth online/networked gaming experience. It has a 1080p front facing webcam with dual-array noise canceling mics, perfect for streaming, video chat, and meetings. The full-sized RGB-backlit keyboard has 4 customizable lighting zones and the keys are all edge-lit for easy visibility and a cool gamer aesthetic. The keys are responsive but have a high actuation force albeit with a soft landing, so they don’t make a lot of noise and snap back pretty quickly. The trackpad is generously sized and responds to multi-touch gestures, but the buttons take a beat to disengage, so alternating left and right mouse clicks very quickly isn’t possible. I strongly recommend using an external mouse. One feature I found interesting was in the ability to create custom key assignment for macros in the OMEN Gaming hub. This is not only useful for executing quick actions or a sequence of keystrokes while gaming, but also has general utility for other applications like automating repetitive work tasks or creating shortcuts. You can also enable some on-screen overlays with stats like CPU temp, framerate, and RAM usage. I was unable, however, to toggle on NVIDIA’s GeForce Experience in-game overlay. Overall, the Transcend 14 is a powerful lightweight gaming laptop with a gorgeous OLED display that delivers a satisfying gaming experience and excellent visuals for content consumption. It’s fast, responsive, and ultra-portable making great for on-to-go work or play.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Battery life, Build quality, Oled display
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Solid 14 inch gaming laptop.
|Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Out of the box, we are getting a 140W USB-C charger. Out of the box my laptop had no charge, but I would say I was able to get 50%ish in 30-40 minutes, which is not bad. The body itself is aluminum, which is not to look at, but it does attract fingerprints easily, but tbh, to me its not that big a deal. Some it is. On the front we have a simple OMEN logo. Overall, it does not look like a gaming laptop on the outside, but when you open it up, the keyboard is a nice bright RGB setup, which I enjoy. So, you are getting simply on the outside, gaming on the inside. The screen itself is a beautiful OLED screen, which if you have not played on OLED yet, this is a great first OLED laptop. You get 16GB of RAM (bare minimum these days, but it will suffice for most games) and a 4060. In my testing, I was able to get 60-90 frames med-high setting on most games I played. The trackpad is average. I feel a bit of a wobble on my unit when utilizing the trackpad, which I am not a huge fan of, but most people now a days have a mouse, so its not THAT big a deal. Overall, I have had no issues with the laptop. I would like to be able to pick if I want to use the integrated graphics or dedicated 4060, but currently the OMEN software does not allow this. The laptop is built well for the most part, and gaming wise (which is what it was built for), I have had no issues.
I would recommend this to a friend Rated 2 out of 5 stars
Not a gaming laptop
||Posted . Owned for less than 1 week when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Its absurd to call this a ganing laptop. It cant even run air link or cable connection with Occulus 2 or 3 (I tested both) without jerky video performance. Its also extremely slow to start up and there us also noticeable lag in opening simple applications like Chrome. Even worse, it becomes uncomfortably hot within just a few minutes. Returning this junk.
No, I would not recommend this to a friend- Pros mentioned:Build quality, Performance, Processor speed
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Early Contender for best laptop of 2024
|Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.The HP OMEN Transcend 14 came in a simple box containing the laptop itself along with a 140W USB-C power adapter. The build quality seems excellent. It is very light, compact and solid with little to no flex and wobble. Aesthetically, I think it’s a beautiful laptop that can pass as a productivity laptop if you turn off the keyboard RGB lights. The internal components are all first rate. Intel Core Ultra 7 155H with Intel AI Boost Neural Processor and integrated Intel Arc Graphics Samsung LPDDR5 K3KL8L80CM-MGCT 16GB memory SK hynix PC801 NVMe Gen4 1TB SSD nVidia GeForce RTX 4060 Laptop GPU Intel Wi-Fi 6E AX211 160MHz External ports are decent. On the left side, there is a Thunderbolt 4/USB-C port and a headphone/microphone jack. At the back there is another USB-C port along with an HDMI 2.1 port. You can use either USB-C ports to charge the laptop but when I tried to use the left side USB-C port for charging, I got a notification that I should charge using the rear USB-C port for full performance. Charging the laptop was also very fast compared to my other laptops. Finally, there are also two USB-A ports on the right side for other expansion needs. The web camera is excellent. Image quality is extremely sharp and has very good low light performance. I think it’s one of the best laptop cameras I have ever experienced. The built-in Windows Camera app also supports features such as automatic framing, eye contact and background blurring which I suspect are enabled with the Intel AI Neural Processor since these features aren’t available in my other computers. This would make a great laptop for video conferencing and work. I got excellent wireless performance and stability with my home network. Link speed is reported to be at 2402/1922 (Mbps) using my TP-Link DECO AX4300 Pro mesh routers. I am also getting full speed with my Xfinity internet service (940.49 Mbps download and 23.68 Mbps upload with 15ms ping). During my use, the laptop has been rock solid. I did not encounter any weird problems. It just works. The 2880 x 1800 OLED screen is gorgeous. Images are bright, crisp and clear and text is super sharp. The colors are so vivid, it makes watching videos and playing games such a great pleasure. The sound is also pretty good as far as laptops go. The sound is clear with a fairly decent soundstage and can get adequately loud but is somewhat lacking in bass as is typical of all laptops. The HP OMEN Transcend 14 comes close to perfection for me. It is the laptop with the fewest compromises that I have owned. I have laptops that are great game machines but are too heavy and big to carry around all the time. I also have light and thin laptops that are easy to carry but they can only play light games. The HP OMEN Transcend 14 is a lightweight, compact, and thin travel laptop that can also play AAA games. With the nVidia RTX 4060 laptop GPU, I was getting 30 to 70 fps at 2880 x 1800 at very high settings when playing games like Baldur’s Gate, Warhammer 40K Chaos Gate, and Marvel’s Midnight Suns. What is even more amazing is that the fan noise is very quiet compared to my other laptops when gaming. You can hear the fans spin but it’s very subdued compared to the jet engines from some of my other laptops. This laptop seems to have the best thermals and fan noise of any laptop that I’ve owned. I’ve been really impressed with it. This laptop also offers an interesting option with its integrated Arc graphics. I’m a big fan of the discrete Arc graphics cards and I was super curious about its integrated versions. You can use the integrated Arc graphics if you want to conserve power usage while still being able to play games. When playing Marvel’s Midnight Suns, I was getting about 21 fps at 2880 x 1800 using the integrated Arc graphics compared to 70 fps with the nVidia RTX 4060. I can get even more performance by lowering the resolution. When using the integrated Arc graphics, I didn’t notice any fan noise. With the new Intel Core Ultra 7 155H, this laptop is also a powerhouse for productivity. Visual Studio 2022 Community with a full workload installed in about 13 minutes and felt very zippy for my software development. Web browsing, watching videos, and general office productivity work (word processing, Excel spreadsheets, and using Quicken for balancing my checkbook) all went smoothly. In my opinion, the only major compromise this laptop has is in future memory upgradability. It only comes with 16GBs of very fast soldered LPDDR5 memory and it is not user upgradable. The advantage of having LPDDR5 memory is that it is usually much faster than user upgradable SODIMM memory. However, LPDDR5 memory is always soldered into the motherboard and is not user upgradable. The internal 1TB SSD is upgradable, however. 16GB is now the bare minimum for me. It is enough for most games and tasks but for more serious software development work, I sometimes would like to have a little more memory when I’m dealing with large datasets. Hopefully, in the future a new memory standard will arrive that will allow super fast memory to be user upgradable in a thin and compact laptop. As for now, I can strongly recommend anyone looking for a new laptop to give consideration to the HP OMEN Transcend Gaming Laptop 14. It has one of the best displays of any laptop that I’ve ever seen. It’s lightweight and easy to carry when traveling yet powerful enough to do AAA gaming and any productivity tasks you might need. It has the most impressive thermals and fan noise of all my other laptops and is the quietest laptop I have ever used when gaming. The HP OMEN Transcend Gaming Laptop 14 could be the best laptop I have ever owned. For me, it’s close to perfection.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Oled display, Processor speed
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
The perfect powerhouse travel companion
|Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.The HP OMEN Transcend 14 laptop is a total game-changer for me. It's super sleek, light weight, and compact, which makes it perfect for gaming on the go. Not only that, but it's also great for digital artists and content creators who need a powerful laptop that's easy to carry around. In a world where gaming laptops are large, heavy and often sporting flashy designs, this particular laptop stands out by exuding a sleek and understated appearance, opting for a more professional and minimalist look. This design choice makes it suitable for a wide range of users, from hardcore gamers to professionals who want a powerful laptop for work and play. Equipped with the latest generation Intel Core Ultra processors, the HP OMEN Transcend 14 delivers exceptional processing power for demanding games and applications. The NVIDIA GeForce graphics card provides stunning visuals and smooth gameplay, handling even the most graphically intensive titles with ease. This laptop includes a free month of Xbox Game Pass which is awesome! The first application I installed was Starfield. I paired my Xbox controller and jumped right in. During setup I made sure that every graphics category was set to max and started the game with massive anticipation. Needless to say, everything runs flawlessly at max settings and looks simply incredible on the 2.8K OLED display. The display is stunning. Easily the best laptop display I have ever had on a Windows machine. Long gone are the days of blocky text. Even the smallest letters are super sharp which is so welcome on Windows laptops. In my opinion I believe all gaming laptops should be, at minimum, 2.8K displays. The colors are vibrant, the blacks are deep. I’ve been having a lot of fun creating my own wallpapers with AI (see review photos). When at home, I usually hook my laptop up to an external monitor. Not with this one as this could actually be a downgrade in quality depending on the external display since the display on this laptop is so beautiful to look at. Bigger isn’t always better. The keyboard is a joy to use. The keys have minimal travel and are very quiet and responsive, making it a great typing experience. The RGB lighting effects are pretty unique on this keyboard. The colors surround the keys and the font selection used for the lettering is also bold and easy to read which is great in low light settings (see review photos). The laptop's exterior features clean lines, a subtle logo, and a dark, matte finish. The overall effect is one of sophistication and elegance, making it a suitable companion for any environment, whether it's a coffee shop, a lecture hall, or a corporate meeting room. The understated design allows users to seamlessly transition from gaming sessions to professional settings without drawing unwanted attention. The seamless blend of performance and aesthetics in this laptop empowers users to enjoy immersive gaming experiences without compromising on professional style. It's a testament to the idea that gaming laptops can be both powerful and elegant, defying the conventional stereotypes associated with the category. As expected, The laptop comes pre-installed with the OMEN Gaming Hub, which offers a centralized platform for game optimization, performance monitoring, and customization options. The Gaming Hub application is well thought out and includes everything you need to play games and monitor, customize, or boost your system. There is even a Camera and Voice enhancer which allows you to minimize unwanted noise from your room if needed. You can also customize the background if you are on a video call and the software does an excellent job of cutting you out and placing you on the new background. I found myself spending quite a bit of time just playing around in the Gaming Hub software and checking out all that it can do. While I have only had it a short time and I have only scratched the surface of what this thing can do, I can confidently say that I am already head over heels in love with it. Honestly, it’s the perfect size for everyday use. In the past, I have debated on whether to bring a large, heavy laptop with me out of the house. This one is a no brainer. I found a great backpack I can load up with extra stuff now that I am not even slightly worried about the weight. In conclusion, I haven’t found a single thing I don’t like about this computer. It handles any task I throw at it with ease and looks amazing while doing it all. HP hit it out of the park with this one.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Battery life, Oled display, Performance
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Powerful Yet Not Customizable
||Posted . Owned for less than 1 week when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Powerful performance for sure, easily able to game or do work on this with no problem, OLED screen looks fantastic as well as the above average frequency on the RAM modules in this system. One big problem I have right now is how you are unable to set your own custom profiles for power draw, and refresh rate. So far I've only found 3 profiles that you are stuck with from the Omen Gaming Hub. Because of this, if i want to save battery, I must use the Eco mode, which sets the refresh rate to 24hz, and I must go into windows display settings > advanced, and set the refresh rate to my desired one. Although semi-quick to do, every time the laptop sleeps or I switch back to balanced/performance, I am met with the same process once I go back to eco. Thankfully balanced and advanced modes do not set your refresh rate after each change, so I typically stay in balanced mode. If you made it this far, customization is my one big need for laptops like this, I typically have had Asus Laptops, and am used to being able to make very specific power usage and refresh rate profiles for my needs. If you know this won't be a bother to you, then this laptop is especially thin, light, and powerful when turned up all the way. I would say 5-6 hours in Balanced mode, which is good however I'm picky and again, want my customization. I am sure in the future HP may add more options, and profiles for these features, but so far it doesn't exist from what I've seen.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Oled display
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
A solid gaming laptop with a standout screen
|Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.The HP Omen Transcend 14 is almost everything I could ask for in a laptop. The first thing that really needs to be discussed about this monitor is the OLED display. The unlimited contrast ratio of OLED makes everything pop and look very vivid. The quality of the picture will put a smile on your face. Initial setup of the laptop was easy: Unpack the laptop, plugin the charger, and follow the prompts to setup Windows. Within 10 minutes you should be up and running. The one oddity during setup is that windows started to instruct me about touch controls, even though the laptop does not have a touch screen. The form factor of the laptop is great. It is a similar size as other 14-inch laptops I have previously used, and doesn’t weigh substantially more than the others. The laptop is thinner than I expected it to be. Being that it is a gaming laptop, I have tried running a few games on it. Both on the native screen and through my 38-inch external monitor. Most of the games I have tried (Portal Revolution, Death Stranding, and Fortnite) ran well on both setups. I generally saw at least 50fps when running on the external monitor. My experience with Deathloop hasn’t been quite as good. To play the game on my external monitor, I had to greatly reduce the resolution. The laptop comes with a 140W charger, which is probably one of the most powerful USB-C chargers I have seen. I do like that you can plug in the laptop from the rear and leave the side USB ports for accessories. My one real gripe with the laptop is that it will not let you charge with 3rd party chargers (at least the ones I have at my house). This restriction prevents me from using a single cable to connect the laptop to my external monitor, which provides power. The LED backed keyboard is pretty fun. Using the HP Light Studio, you can fully customize the behavior of the lights. I am glad that there is an option to disable it if it becomes distracting. While it would be nice if you could add additional RAM to the device, it is good that you can at least replace the M2 drive and battery.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Oled display
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Great for Traveling, but Underwhelming on Gaming
|Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.I was looking for an upgrade to my travel laptop that was a lightweight gaming PC that could play games well but mostly travel even better. I landed on the HP OMEN Transcend 14 as it fit the bill and offered a great screen with an all-aluminum chassis which would hold up well throughout my travels. The added fast charging was another key feature that pulled me to select the HP OMEN Transcend. Pros: - Weight of 3.6lbs and thickness of 0.71in. - Sturdy case made from all aluminum. - OLED 2.8K screen is beautiful. - Quick charge 50% in 30mins. Cons: - 16GB of RAM, non-expandable. - HP pre-installed Bloatware. There really isn’t too much in the box with the HP Omen Transcend 14; Laptop in a light foam wrap and packaging, USB C power adapter tucked under the laptop, and a small packet of documents. I was pleasantly surprised by the lack of advertising or unnecessary packaging. A good example of sustainable packaging from HP. The setup was straightforward and standard, plug the charger in and into the USB C port on the back and go! The side USB C can charge but it is not a fast charger, if you do plug into the side USB C you will get a popup telling you to plug the power into the back USB C for best charging performance. The HP Omen Transcend 14 is just over the thin and light laptop category, at 3.6 pounds and 0.71in thick, with a width of 12.32 in and depth of 9.19in. This laptop is tiny yet quite capable with an Intel Core Ultra 7 Series 1 155H, that’s a 16 core with 22 threads. This is done with 6 performance cores (2 threads per core), 8 efficient cores, and 2 low power efficient cores. The Intel Core Ultra series introduces the Low Power Efficient cores, which are closer to the low power cores used in phone CPU’s that run background services. With this, the Processor Base Power is only 28W! Though with the Turbo Boost, otherwise known as overclocking, the Turbo Power can reach 115W, which will get warn quick and drain the battery quite quickly. The Screen on the HP Omen Transcend 14 is quite amazing, it is a 2.8K OLED screen with a resolution of 2880 by 1800 (pixels) with a refresh rate (FPS) of 120hz, which is needed on any gaming screen. The screen has a brightness of 500 nits and color of 100% DCI-P3, which is a wider color gamut than standard sRGB, which gives it a VESA Display HDR 500 rating. This shows with the blacks being much deeper and colors that pop. This is the first true HDR rated screen I’ve used on a laptop, and I must be honest it is quite impressive! Paired with a dedicated GPU, this model was the RTX 4060 with 8GB of VRAM, and you’ve got a beautiful screen to do accurate color correction work on or play stunning videos in! I intend to make full use of this for some lighter final video editing and playbacks as the screen is just so smooth in both color and playback. For connectivity, on the wireless side there is Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3, both of which I had no issues with. Wi-Fi connected easily and maintained connection during use without dropping. I connected a Bluetooth mouse and headset without any issues, the Bluetooth sound was good, but your results may vary based on the headset used. The built in HyperX speakers performed much better than I expected for a laptop of this size, enough for watching videos or playing a game. The keyboard feels really good as laptop keyboards come, very responsive and clicky without being too loud or stiff. The mousepad as well is extremely responsive and extra large at about 5in by 3in! Plenty of space for multi touch gestures and comfortability without the need for a mouse, but I’ll still be pairing it up with a nice travel mouse to save my hands. Another one of the more impressive features of the HP OMEN Transcend 14 is the fast charging! This allows you to charge the battery to 50% in 30mins, the only limitation is that you must have the laptop shut down/powered off to use the feature. I found this very ideal for a travel laptop, as often I only realize I forgot to charge my laptop as I’m preparing to leave or an hour before I’ve got to head out the door. This feature alone will save me many headaches! The lighting zones on the keyboard are something new to me, it helps to see the WASD but otherwise I find it kind of clunky considering most gaming keyboards with any kind of lighting allow for a by key lighting or full keyboard lighting effects. I believe there are full lighting effects that COULD be used, but they seem to be hidden behind a paywall for the HP OMEN Software that I will most likely end up removing so I see no point in paying for this option. This is the equivalent to paying for heated seats via a service plan, which I am not a fan of. Performance is good, though the 16GB of RAM is a bottleneck to the rest of an otherwise great computer. I wouldn’t have much of an issue if the RAM was upgradeable, but with it being soldered on, it will impact the future useability of the laptop. I don’t know why companies still add only 16GB of soldiered RAM and still call it a gaming computer, most need at least 32GB to run major games. Heck, even running Teams in the background will consume 8-10GB, discord is better but still the lack of RAM will have major performance impacts. Though this isn’t too big of an issue for my intended use, it still would have been nice to have a fully functional gaming rig this size, but oh well. The HP Omen Transcend 14 handled Vampire Survivors just fine, keeping up with the crazy number of monsters and frames that occur later in the levels. There was no screen tearing or lagging as the timer approached 30mins which is an impressive feat for a laptop. In Halo Infinite I was able to run it at a custom setting of mostly high with shadows and lighting turned down and achieve an average FPS of about 60. Very good for 16GB of RAM and an RTX 4060, but not a top contender for best gaming laptop. The big thing here is the size and weight of 3.6lbs, with enough power to play games well. Unfortunately, I tried to run Destiny 2, and the first 2 times I loaded in to test and adjust settings, the computer gave me the Blue Screen of Death. I was able to finally adjust the settings down, setting most graphic effects off and reducing the draw distance and environmental effects, but even with all this turned down I got an average of 55 FPS with huge drops in frames down to 20 FPS. In my opinion, this would be unplayable, but I also wasn’t expecting to play Destiny 2 on this laptop, just using it to test out how much I can push it. In the above tests, Halo was able to play just fine with the HP Omen Optimizer, but Destiny 2 would crash until I turned the settings down and disabled the optimizer. Honestly, I think if I clean installed windows and tweaked the settings some more, I could probably reach a steady 60 FPS with Destiny 2 but as I want to use the HP Omen Transcend 14 for travel and creative works more than gaming, it would not be worth it just yet to do the clean installation. Though, for anyone getting a gaming laptop, I often find that a clean installation of windows, removing all the software installed by the manufacturer will greatly improve the performance of the laptop overall. So, if you do get this laptop, and have issues with some of the games you want to play, I would consider a clean installation of windows before returning the laptop. This laptop would be perfect for someone who travels but would like to do some light gaming or creative work while on the go without having to lug around a monstrous 7lb laptop. Though, if possible, opt for the higher RAM version to ensure your device lasts well into the future, as 16GB is the bare minimum needed in gaming or creative work these days and will be the biggest bottleneck with this machine since it cannot be upgraded after purchase. Overall, I really enjoy the HP OMEN Transcend 14 for what I want to use it for, though the gaming performance is very underwhelming. I would rather consider the 16GB model as a “bit more” than a Thin and Light laptop, than a gaming laptop. For my uses, the 16GB/RTX 4060 model is perfect, but I would mostly recommend the 32GB/RTX 4070 model for the travelling gamer.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Battery life, Oled display
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Nice Performance
||Posted . Owned for 2 weeks when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.The screen is absolutely amazing and the 4060 is pretty powerful. Would have liked if it went up to 80W, but 70 fps on Forza Horizon 5 Extreme settings native res to upscaling. Battery life is 2-3 hours on Hybrid mode balanced, but you can get like 6-8 if you turn off the discrete graphics. Reason why this is a 4 star review is because the build quality is so so. I hear creaks sometimes in the hinge and I dont know if this is my product, but the when i lift up the laptop the screen starts to pull away from the frame at the top by the webcam area. All in all this a good laptop, but with some build quality issues.
I would recommend this to a friend Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Transcendent Expectations, Adequate Results
|Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.The 14” gaming laptop market presents OEMs with a difficult design challenge - putting desktop-grade performance into a machine smaller than most desktop motherboards. Those seeking portability without compromise now have multiple options to choose from in this segment, and HP’s newest chassis in the Transcend line of OMEN gaming laptops introduces what’s arguably one of the sleekest, most understated visual designs among them, and while it hits the mark for a premium-feeling machine, a few small foibles in its first outing keep it just shy of perfection. - Unboxing & Setup Bereft of unnecessary accessories or documentation, there’s little to unpack besides a sleek, premium-feeling laptop and its AC adapter. An aluminum (possibly magnesium?) finish and simple chassis design keeps the clutter and branding to a minimum, leaving a device that was clearly made in Cupertino’s image. I was thrilled to find that the AC adapter is 140W USB-C PD, and indeed there are no DC barrel jacks to be found on the Transcend 14. Reduced e-waste is always a good thing. Setup was no more or less annoying as it is for any new device with Windows 11 preinstalled - you’ll have to navigate the command line to skip the Microsoft account requirement, but aside from a few HP-specific customizations (warranty registration, namely) you’ll be up and running fairly quick. Unfortunately there is some preinstalled bloatware and myriad trial offers to contend with…old HP tactics die hard. - Build Quality & Connectivity With an all-metal chassis and a surprising amount of heft for its size, the Transcend 14 feels like no HP laptop I’ve used before. The lid hinge holds tight but is easy to operate, the keyboard tray and generously oversized touchpad exhibit no noticeable flex unless you really try and force the issue, and every edge of the device is rounded and machined to precision. Nothing feels like it was designed in a haphazard or cost-cutting manner; it feels like HP put the effort in and it shows. Physical connectivity is limited to a pair of USB 3.0 Type-A ports, two USB-C ports (both of which support charging - though the one on the rear accepts the full power of the AC adapter), a combination 3.5mm headphone & mic port, and a full-size HDMI port. The USB-C ports offer the most versatility, featuring DisplayPort output and Thunderbolt 4 connectivity. I would have liked to see a microSD slot, but since this is a gaming-focused laptop I’m not terribly surprised nor disappointed by its omission. - Performance Intel’s Core Ultra 7 155h in the Transcend 14 is an efficient and powerful processor. Featuring 6 “performance” cores with hyperthreading, and 10 “efficient” single-thread cores, this 16-core, 22-thread CPU handled everything I threw at it with aplomb. The efficient cores handle background tasks during gaming, leaving the performance cores to tackle games and other foreground tasks. Aiding the CPU is LPDDR5 memory running at an astonishing 7,467MHz, keeping bandwidth plentiful so processor scheduling in Windows 11 can work to its full potential. I am disappointed that there’s only 16GB of it to go around on a device this expensive…most modern AAA games require that much system RAM at minimum, and it won’t be long before that presents a significant bottleneck. More on this later. The [mobile] NVidia RTX 4060 is a potent graphics chip for any laptop, and it feels at home in a 14” chassis. Don’t expect performance matching the desktop RTX 4060 - this is firmly a 1080p/1440p GPU that will struggle to push high or even medium details at native 4K. The added benefit of NVidia’s RTX GPUs is their suite of performance enhancements that can boost framerates with a minimal hit to visual quality - namely, deep learning super sampling (DLSS). With DLSS enabled I could push high and ultra details at the laptop’s max resolution while maintaining a floor of 60fps (often much higher than that). I could see a slight reduction in resolution and detail from DLSS in calm, still scenes, but with even the slightest bit of motion it was hard to notice any drop in quality when using quality or balanced DLSS. Definitely a feature to lean on here. - Thermals & Noise At full bore, the machine does get toasty. Thankfully the cooling solution HP is using here can keep up with the heat output of both the GPU and CPU, using a shared heatpipe solution with two blower fans to vent to the rear of the laptop. A slight rise from the laptop’s feet ensures cool air intake from below. It’s sufficient to keep the 28 watt CPU and 60 watt GPU from thermal throttling under sustained use. The system’s cooling fans run frequently if not constantly, but they are easily the quietest fans I’ve heard in a gaming laptop, and move an impressive amount of air. At full bore the fan noise is lower pitch than I expected, making them unobtrusive and hardly a distraction when pushing the laptop to its limits in gaming. The fan curve can be fully customized in the OMEN Gaming hub using either the GPU or CPU temperature as its reference point. - Screen & Sound The killer feature of this machine is its gorgeous OLED display. The 16:10 screen has a resolution of 2880x1800, making it firmly “retina” level. It’s sharp, clear, and incredibly vibrant, with the hallmark black reproduction of OLEDs allowing incredible detail in dark scenes that don’t wash out at all. I stop just short of calling it the best display I’ve used only due to ever so slight color shift noticeable on pure white backgrounds, but this may be due to the [excellent] anti-glare coating as much as it is the display itself. The refresh rate ranges from 48 to 120Hz, allowing Nvidia G-Sync to work to its fullest and utilize low framerate compensation to keep the action smooth. The response time is fantastic as well - ghosting is so minimal as to be unnoticeable. Whether this panel will succumb to OLED burn-in over time remains to be seen. The built-in speakers are fairly decent. As expected they don’t reach particularly low into the bass end of the frequency spectrum, but they do a good job approximating it. Highs are somewhat cut off by the downward-firing speakers, but they’re still perceptible and the midrange is clear. They get reasonably loud and don’t noticeably distort approaching max volume. They’ll do in a pinch, but I would still recommend headphones or external speakers of some sort. - Keyboard & Touchpad I found these to be the laptop’s weakest points. Though sturdy, the layout of the keyboard and flush spacing of the keys makes it easy to mistype or hit the wrong key when you’re using muscle memory; navigating the keyboard by feel is hit-and-miss. I would have preferred to see a chiclet-style keyboard here, doubly so when the keys are using what feels like typical rubber dome switches. Further, the power key is set right where your finger wants to go to hit the Delete key on other laptops, and I keep hitting Control while reaching for the Fn key. Expect a bunch of errant presses as you learn this slightly odd layout. The generously-sized touchpad feels great and works well 95% of the time. The biggest issue I have is that palm rejection and finger detection feels inconsistent. Several times during typing this review, my palm grazed the corner of the touchpad just the right way to move the cursor, and on multiple occasions using the touchpad normally it would stop detecting my finger until I tapped again. Adjusting touchpad sensitivity did not seem to make a noticeable difference in the consistency of either its palm rejection or finger detection. It also has trouble detecting right clicks at times, adding to the frustration. - Battery Life & Upgradeability In the Transcend’s normal “Hybrid” mode, I achieved about 6 hours of screen time in desktop and web browsing usage before I hit a low battery warning, albeit while running the display in its maximum refresh mode. Using the Omen Gaming Hub to set the laptop to “Eco” mode, battery life skyrocketed to a projected 12 hours…but with noticeable performance loss and stutters using basic applications, as it seemingly disables performance cores and limits clock speeds to below 1.5GHz. The sweet spot seems to be the “Balanced” profile with the RTX 4060 disabled - I saw a projected 8 to 9 hours battery life doing so. Unfortunately the laptop lacks a “mux” switch, so disabling or enabling the GPU requires a system reboot, and the HDMI port is disabled with the GPU. Where the Transcend 14 loses the most points is in its lack of upgradeability - namely, future proofing. The only user-replaceable item in the machine is the NVMe disk (of which there’s only the one slot), as the RAM is soldered to the mainboard. This isn’t unexpected as it’s a small and powerful machine, but the choice to use only 16GB of RAM in a high-end product severely limits its future potential. Nearly half the memory is in use just sitting at the Windows 11 desktop with a couple browser tabs open, and while the system can lean on its speedy PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD as swap space, performance will still suffer and the disk will wear faster over time. - Bottom Line Ultimately, I can’t overlook the 16GB RAM limit in a high-end, portable laptop spec’d for gaming. 32GB of RAM would have been perfect, and indeed the higher-end version of this laptop which contains a slightly faster Intel Core Ultra 9 processor and RTX 4070 GPU has 32GB of RAM. I would recommend that model over this one for the modest premium. That aside, the HP Transcend 14 is a well-built, premium laptop that has a lot going for it. A few detractors keep it shy of perfection, and I’m sure it will be on sale below its $1,699 MSRP at times, making the configuration and first-generation quibbles much more palatable. While I would hesitate to recommend this particular spec at full price, the HP OMEN Transcend 14 is a device I would still recommend for those looking for a gaming laptop that doesn’t look like one.
I would recommend this to a friend