I don’t think I’ve ever seen another 15.6-inch laptop this portable. Extremely bright. Numeric keypad is a great addition. Excellent battery life. Runs very quiet.
TIRED
Disappointing performance. Incredibly expensive. A bit low on resolution. No touchscreen.
I fell in love with the LG Gram SuperSlim the moment I laid eyes upon it. It’s impossibly thin—just 15 millimeters thick including the elevating standoffs underneath the chassis—and just 2.2 pounds in weight. All while sporting an ultrabright 15.6-inch screen, a size that normally demands bones that will weigh you down 4 pounds or more. In all seriousness, this machine feels like it is brushing up against the terminus of how portable a laptop can physically get.
It’s a computer that really invites you to work in multiple windows and spread out while you’re using it—so much so that there’s room for a numeric keypad on the right side of the keyboard. This can take a little getting used to, as the delete and backspace keys require some retraining of muscle memory, but if spreadsheets are on the docket, it’s a real timesaver.
Photograph: LG
The slim profile means keyboard travel is quite limited, but years of tapping on phone screens have made limited-feedback touch-typing like this less of an issue than it might have been in years past. The smallish touchpad may be either a pro or a con depending on your point of view. I found it a touch on the small side but was happy that I wasn’t accidentally rubbing it with my palm all the time, sending wayward taps to Windows.
On paper, the specs are solid: a 2.2-GHz Intel Core i7-1360P processor, a whopping 32 GB of RAM, and 2 terabytes of solid-state drive storage. There are three models of the SuperSlim, and the only differences are the amount of RAM and storage—all three use the same CPU. I tested the highest-level tier, formally denoted as model number 15Z90RT-K.ADB9U1. Whew. This configuration retails for $2,000.
Photograph: LG
Here’s the point where my love began to fade. I knew some compromises must have been made to get this computer down to its flyweight stature, but I was shocked when I finally saw the Gram’s middling performance scores. On business apps, the unit scored lower than the $700 Asus Zenbook 14 I tested, and it didn't do much better on graphics performance, using its integrated chip to eke out frame rates that might have been impressive four years ago.
On the plus side, I managed just over 10 hours out of the Gram’s battery on a full-brightness YouTube playback, which is impressive considering the luminosity of the screen. Another huge bonus is the whisper-quiet fan, as even under load it barely registers more than a mild hiss.
Expansion ports are straightforward: three USB-C ports and that’s it. (One of those is used for charging the device; two of them support DisplayPort and Thunderbolt 4.) Oddly, you’ll find a USB-C to Ethernet adapter in the box, should you need to connect via a hardline.
Photograph: LG
There is also the matter of the price: $2,000 in this configuration, $1,700 for the entry-level model with 16 GB of RAM and a 512-GB SSD. That is a phenomenal price for a unit that, unfortunately, simply feels like it’s dragging its feet—especially if it needs to rely on some graphics operations. Not to mention the 1,920 x 1,080-pixel resolution (with no touchscreen option) is lower than expected—particularly for a display this physically large—and the keyboard backlighting feels a bit dim (even at its highest setting). The audio quality is somewhat tinny and average at best.
In relatively casual use (and when toting it in a backpack), the laptop really shines, but when you need power, it’s late to the party. Ultimately I worry that, given so much incredible promise with the LG Gram SuperSlim, perhaps my expectations were overly inflated. Then again, considering the price, they surely feel more than justified.
Christopher Null, a longtime technology journalist, is a contributor to WIRED and the editor of Drinkhacker. Chris is among our lead laptop reviewers and leads WIRED's coverage of hearing aids. He was previously executive editor of PC Computing magazine and the founding editor in chief of Mobile magazine. ... Read More
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