BreezyLife 14" Dual Laptop Screen Extender Review

It's not a laptop. It's a portable monitor sold with confusing specs, and its rock-bottom reliability score is a major red flag.

Screen 14"
Weight 0.6 kg
BreezyLife 14" Dual Laptop Screen Extender laptop
20.5 Overall Score

Overview

The BreezyLife Thin 14" Dual Laptop Screen Extender is a weird one. It's not a laptop, but it's sold like one. For $190, you get a 14-inch portable monitor that weighs just 0.59kg (about 1.3lbs). It's basically a second screen that connects via HDMI. That's it. There's no computer inside, so forget about CPU, RAM, or storage specs. It's just a display in a slim case.

Its best and only real feature is its portability, scoring in the 96th percentile for compactness. That means it's lighter and thinner than almost any actual laptop. But that's where the good news ends. Our scoring system, which compares it to real laptops, shows it's terrible for almost everything else. It's predictably awful for gaming (2.8/100) and gets rock-bottom scores for reliability, storage, and RAM because, well, it has none of those things.

Performance

Performance isn't really a thing here. This is a monitor, not a computer. Its 'CPU' and 'GPU' percentiles (23rd and 18th) are meaningless because it doesn't have them. The integrated graphics just power the 14-inch screen itself. The 'screen' percentile is a low 16th, which tells us the panel quality is basic at best. Don't expect great color or brightness. It's a functional second display, and that's the entire performance story. It shows an image.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 31.8
GPU 20.4
RAM 17.3
Ports 26.7
Screen 27.2
Portability 97.1
Storage 4.7
User Sentiment 78.2
Reliability 3.5
Social Proof 96.5

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Extremely portable at 0.59kg (96th percentile for compactness). 97th
  • Simple plug-and-play setup with HDMI. 97th
  • Very thin profile, easy to slip into a bag. 78th
  • Provides a basic second screen for cheap.
  • It does one job and is lightweight doing it.

Cons

  • Not a laptop. It has no computer components (2nd percentile for storage). 4th
  • Dismal reliability score (3rd percentile) suggests build quality concerns. 5th
  • Basic, low-quality screen (16th percentile). 17th
  • Terrible value if you mistake it for a computer. 20th
  • Only one port (HDMI), limiting connectivity (21st percentile).

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Size 14"
Brightness 300 nits

Connectivity

HDMI HDMI

Physical

Weight 0.6 kg / 1.3 lbs

Value & Pricing

At $190, the value proposition is confusing. As a portable monitor, you can find better 14-inch options with higher refresh rates or touchscreens for similar money. As a 'laptop,' which is how it's being presented in this comparison, it's a terrible value. You're paying for half a product. The price per performance ratio is infinite because there's no performance to speak of. You're just buying a screen.

Price History

€200 €250 €300 €350 €400 Mar 28Apr 5Apr 9Apr 13 €297

vs Competition

Comparing this to the listed 'competitors' is almost funny. The Apple MacBook Pro M4 is a $3,000 powerhouse. The Lenovo Legion Pro 7i is a gaming beast. This BreezyLife thing isn't in their league; it's not even the same sport. A more apt comparison is to other portable monitors. Against those, it's light but likely has a worse panel and fewer features than something like an Asus ZenScreen. The Zenbook Duo, which has two built-in screens, makes this external add-on look redundant. If you need a second screen, buy a proper portable monitor. If you need a computer, buy a laptop.

Spec BreezyLife 14" Dual Laptop Screen Extender Lenovo Yoga Lenovo - Yoga Slim 7i Aura Edition - Copilot+ PC - Apple MacBook Air Geek Squad Certified Refurbished MacBook Air 13.3" ASUS ZenBook ASUS - Zenbook A14 14" FHD+ OLED Laptop - Copilot+ HP OmniBook HP - OmniBook 5 - Copilot+ PC - 14" 2K OLED Acer Aspire Acer 14" Aspire 14 AI Laptop Copilot+ PC
CPU - Intel Core Ultra 7 256V Apple M1 Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus X1P-64-100 Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus X1P-64-100 Intel Core Ultra 7 256V
RAM (GB) - 16 8 16 16 16
Storage (GB) - 1000 512 512 512 1024
Screen 14" 15.3" 2880x1800 13.3" 2560x1600 14" 1920x1200 14" 1920x1200 14" 1920x1200
GPU - Intel Arc Graphics Intel Plus Qualcomm X1 Qualcomm X1 Intel Arc Graphics
OS - Windows 11 Home macOS Big Sur 11.0 Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home
Weight (kg) 0.6 1.5 1.3 1.1 1.4 1.4
Battery (Wh) - 70 - - - 65
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamPortScreenCompactStorageUser SentimentReliabilitySocial Proof
BreezyLife 14" Dual Laptop Screen Extender 31.820.417.326.727.297.14.778.23.596.5
Lenovo Yoga Slim 7i Aura Edition 15.3” 3K 120Hz Compare 68.866.360.696.889.153.572.181.37695.4
Apple MacBook Air Geek Squad Certified Refurbished 13.3" Laptop M1 chip Compare 48.654.55.690.577.593.548.7095.192.5
ASUS ZenBook A14 14" Compare 9141.672.297.276.388.348.7505696.5
HP OmniBook OmniBook 5 14" 2K Compare 9141.67283.973.982.948.767.330.697.3
Acer Aspire 14" Compare 68.866.372.295.859.979.984.51.6991

Verdict

Here's the data-backed recommendation: do not buy this thinking it's a laptop. It is not. It's a very basic portable monitor with a misleading product name. Its 96th percentile score for compactness is the only positive, and that's because it's missing all the parts that make a computer heavy. If you desperately need the absolute lightest possible 14-inch HDMI screen and don't care about quality, maybe consider it. For literally everyone else, from students to business users, its scores in the teens and single digits tell the whole story. Spend your $190 elsewhere.