
At Computex 2026, Dell is rolling out two major refreshes across its consumer lineup. The new XPS 13 targets students and young professionals, trimming weight and thickness while still offering a premium 13.4‑inch display and the latest Intel hardware. On the gaming side, Alienware is updating its big‑screen monitors with a 39‑inch 5K OLED and a 34‑inch 280 Hz QD‑OLED, both designed to deliver higher brightness, faster response, and better everyday usability than the previous generation. Check out the details below.
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The new Dell XPS 13 is the brand’s thinnest and lightest XPS yet, built for students and young professionals who want a premium-feeling laptop that’s still relatively affordable. It weighs about 1 kg, measures just 12.75 mm thick, and uses an aluminium chassis that comes in Sky and Storm colours. You get a 13.4‑inch 2.5K touch display with 100 percent DCI‑P3 colour, a variable 30–120 Hz refresh rate for smoother visuals and a battery that claims up‑to‑17 hours of video streaming.
Under the hood, it runs on Intel Core Series 3 processors at launch, with Intel Core Ultra Series 3 options coming later, up to 32 GB LPDDR5X RAM and up to 1 TB PCIe Gen4 SSD storage. Other features include a dual‑fan cooling setup, a backlit keyboard, a standard touchscreen, Intel Wi‑Fi 7, and a glass touchpad.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Design | Around 1 kg, 12.75 mm thin aluminium chassis |
| Display | 13.4‑inch 2.5K LCD touchscreen, 100% DCI‑P3, 30–120 Hz variable refresh |
| CPU options | Intel Core Series 3; Intel Core Ultra Series 3 coming post‑launch |
| Memory | Up to 32 GB LPDDR5X |
| Storage | Up to 1 TB PCIe Gen4 SSD |
| Battery claim | Up to ~17 hours of video streaming |
| Connectivity | Intel Wi‑Fi 7, Bluetooth, USB‑C / Thunderbolt (depending on CPU) |
Alongside the new XPS 13, Dell also brought a refreshed lineup of Alienware gaming monitors to Computex. Check it out below:
Alienware’s 39‑inch AW3926QW is their big, showpiece monitor this year. It’s a curved 5K OLED screen that tries to look good not just in a dark gaming room, but also in bright everyday setups. The new RGB‑stripe tandem OLED panel claims to get very bright while still keeping deep blacks and sharp text, so games, movies, and even plain desktop work should look clean and vivid.
Its key trick up its sleeve is the dual‑mode design: you can run it at 5K and 165 Hz for immersive single‑player games or switch to 1080p at 330 Hz when you want ultra‑fast response for competitive titles, all from the on‑screen menu.
Alienware also tries to ease the usual OLED worries with built‑in pixel management to reduce burn‑in risk and comes with a 3‑year burn‑in warranty. On the back, you get all the ports you’d expect from a high‑end display, plus a built‑in KVM so you can hook up more than one PC and still use a single keyboard and mouse.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Size & type | 39‑inch curved RGB‑stripe tandem OLED |
| Resolution | 5120 × 2160 (5K ultrawide) |
| Refresh rate | 165 Hz at 5K; 330 Hz at 1080p (dual‑mode) |
| Brightness | Up to 1,300 nits peak |
| Curve | 1500R |
| HDR | DisplayHDR True Black 500, Dolby Vision |
| Response time | 0.03 ms (gray‑to‑gray) |
| Sync | G‑SYNC Compatible, FreeSync Premium Pro |
| Ports | DP 2.1, HDMI 2.1 (eARC), USB‑C (90 W), KVM |
The 34‑inch AW3426DW is a major refresh of Alienware’s popular QD‑OLED ultrawide. It keeps the same 34‑inch curved format but uses a newer “Penta Tandem” QD‑OLED panel that claims to be brighter, sharper, and more efficient. It also has higher peak brightness, better everyday brightness, and a new anti‑reflective coating. The refresh rate has jumped from 240 Hz to 280 Hz, with a very fast response time plus support for both major adaptive‑sync standards.
The monitor is built to handle fast shooters as well as big single‑player games without tearing or smearing. In short, it’s the “sweet spot” ultrawide for people who want a premium OLED experience but don’t need a giant 39‑inch panel. You also get 3-year burn-in warranty here.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Size & type | 34‑inch curved QD‑OLED (Penta Tandem) |
| Resolution | 3440 × 1440 (ultrawide) |
| Refresh rate | 280 Hz |
| Brightness | Up to 1,300 nits peak; higher typical nits |
| Coating | New anti‑reflective finish (less glare) |
| HDR | DisplayHDR True Black 500, Dolby Vision |
| Response time | 0.03 ms |
| Sync | G‑SYNC Compatible, FreeSync Premium Pro |
The new XPS 13 seems to be Dell’s answer to students and first‑time buyers who always liked the XPS look but were pushed toward cheaper Inspiron models. Earlier XPS 13s were either pricier, more powerful “creator” machines or experimental designs with invisible haptic touchpads and high‑end OLEDs. This refresh is a step back toward a simpler, lighter 13‑inch model that keeps the aluminium build, slim InfinityEdge screen, touchscreen, and Wi‑Fi 7 but dials down specs and (eventually) price so more people can actually buy one.
For Alienware, the 39‑inch AW3926QW and 34‑inch AW3426DW build directly on its earlier QD‑OLED line, but both push past the “OLED is great, but only in a dark room” limitation. The 39‑inch 5K flagship uses a new RGB‑stripe tandem OLED panel to boost peak brightness and text clarity versus previous Alienware OLEDs while still keeping deep blacks and adding a dual‑display‑mode setup that older models missed. Together, they sit above Alienware’s more affordable 32‑ and 34‑inch 240 Hz LCDs and give enthusiasts more concrete reasons to upgrade from the first‑generation 34‑inch QD‑OLED or smaller 27‑inch OLEDs.