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ASUS ZenBook 14 OLED 14" UX3405CA-DS51T-CA Ponder Blue

Featuring an Intel Core Ultra 5 225H chip and a 14-inch 1920x1200 OLED touchscreen with 400 nits and 100% DCI-P3, the ZenBook 14 OLED weighs just 1.28kg and packs a 75Wh battery. The integrated Arc 130T graphics handle AI tasks and light creative work, while Thunderbolt, HDMI 2.1, and Wi-Fi 7 provide modern connectivity. It's ideal for students and professionals needing a vivid, color-accurate display for everyday productivity and media consumption in a highly portable design.

CPU Intel Core Ultra 5 225H
RAM 16 GB
Storage 512 GB
Screen 14" 1920x1200
GPU Intel® Arc™ 130T Graphics Processor
OS Windows® 11 Home
Weight 1.3 kg
Battery 75 Wh
ASUS ZenBook 14 OLED 14" UX3405CA-DS51T-CA Ponder Blue laptop
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Sobre este Laptop

Featuring an Intel Core Ultra 5 225H chip and a 14-inch 1920x1200 OLED touchscreen with 400 nits and 100% DCI-P3, the ZenBook 14 OLED weighs just 1.28kg and packs a 75Wh battery. The integrated Arc 130T graphics handle AI tasks and light creative work, while Thunderbolt, HDMI 2.1, and Wi-Fi 7 provide modern connectivity. It's ideal for students and professionals needing a vivid, color-accurate display for everyday productivity and media consumption in a highly portable design.

  • CPU Intel Core Ultra 5 225H
  • RAM 16 GB
  • Storage 512 GB
  • Screen 14" 1920x1200
  • GPU Intel® Arc™ 130T Graphics Processor
  • OS Windows® 11 Home
  • Weight kg 1.3
  • Battery wh 75

The 30-Second Version

At 1.28kg, this ZenBook is one of the most portable laptops around, packing an 82nd-percentile CPU and a gorgeous OLED. But the integrated graphics cough up a miserable 19.5 gaming score, and the 512GB SSD is average at best. Unless a featherweight build is your number-one must-have, $1450 is too much for what you get.

Overview

At just 1.28kg, this ZenBook 14 OLED is a standout for portability, sitting in the 84th percentile among all laptops we've tested. That weight, combined with a 14-inch OLED touchscreen that pumps out 400 nits and full DCI-P3 coverage, makes it a lovely entertainment companion—our entertainment score hit 71.3, and the screen lands in the 76th percentile. If you're a student or commuter who mainly streams, browses, and types, the form factor alone is a huge draw.

But the numbers tell a more mixed story. Intel's Core Ultra 5 225H pushes CPU performance to the 82nd percentile, so everyday snappiness is a given. The trouble is the integrated Arc 130T graphics, which drag the gaming score down to 19.5 and keep the total score at a middling 65.8. You're getting a premium-feeling ultrabook with a mediocre graphics punch, and at $1450, that trade-off stings.

Performance

The heart of this machine is a 14-core Core Ultra 5 225H that posts an 82nd-percentile CPU score. That means it outpaces the vast majority of laptops in our database for raw processor grunt—impressive for something this thin. Multi-tab browsing, large spreadsheets, and even light video editing feel effortless. The 16GB of LPDDR5X RAM is about average (52nd percentile) and soldered, so don't expect to upgrade later.

Graphics, on the other hand, are strictly average. The integrated Arc 130T sits at the 64th percentile, fine for a Netflix binge, casual photo edits, or pushing that 1920x1200 OLED. But the moment you fire up a modern game, the 19.5 gaming score reminds you this is not a play machine. The 60Hz panel also caps the smoothness, so twitchy esports titles are out of the question. It's a capable media partner, just not a fast one.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 82.4
GPU 64
RAM 53.2
Ports 83.8
Screen 77.4
Portability 84.5
Storage 53.7
Reliability 58.2

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Incredibly light 1.28kg body (84th percentile for compactness) 85th
  • Vibrant OLED touchscreen with 400 nits and 100% DCI-P3 (76th percentile screen) 84th
  • Strong CPU for an ultrabook (82nd percentile) 82th
  • Solid port selection including Thunderbolt and HDMI 2.1 (84th percentile port) 77th
  • Next-gen Wi-Fi 7 and backlit keyboard

Cons

  • Gaming score of 19.5—integrated graphics choke on anything demanding
  • Only 512GB of storage, well below average (53rd percentile)
  • Soldered RAM with no upgrade path and middle-of-the-road capacity (52nd percentile)
  • Mediocre reliability rating (58th percentile)
  • Steep $1450 price given the specs

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Intel Core Ultra 5 225H
Cores 14
Frequency 1.7 GHz
L3 Cache 18 MB

Graphics

GPU Intel® Arc™ 130T Graphics Processor
Type integrated
VRAM 16 GB
VRAM Type Shared

Memory & Storage

RAM 16 GB
RAM Generation LPDDR5X
Storage 512 GB
Storage Type NVMe SSD

Display

Size 14"
Resolution 1920 (Full HD)
Panel OLED
Refresh Rate 60 Hz
Brightness 400 nits
Color Gamut 100% DCI-P3

Connectivity

USB-C Ports 2
USB Ports 1
Thunderbolt Thunderbolt 4
HDMI 1x HDMI 2.1 port w/ TMDS
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 7
Bluetooth Bluetooth v5.4
Ethernet None

Physical

Weight 1.3 kg / 2.8 lbs
Battery 75 Wh
OS Windows® 11 Home

Value & Pricing

At $1450, the ZenBook 14 OLED asks premium money for a mid-pack ultrabook. You're essentially paying for that beautiful OLED and featherweight chassis. But the storage sits at the 53rd percentile, the RAM is average, and the integrated GPU can't hold a candle to even entry-level discrete chips. Competitors like the MSI Prestige or Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro often deliver similar or better CPU, more storage, and a comparable display for less. Unless you're absolutely smitten by the 1.28kg weight, you'll find more balanced value elsewhere.

vs Competition

Stacked against the Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro, you get a higher-resolution OLED and often a more generous SSD for a similar or lower price—that machine simply gives you more screen real estate and storage per dollar. The MSI Prestige 13 (PRE13EVOA2088) shaves off even more weight while keeping CPU muscle close, though its display might trade some punch. Apple's MacBook Pro M5 Pro starts higher but flattens this ASUS in GPU muscle and brightness, plus its mini-LED 120Hz panel is a big step up for creative work. If you're dead set on Windows and 1.28kg with an OLED, the ZenBook holds its own; but for most people, the Galaxy Book5 Pro offers a better-rounded package for the same cash.

Spec ASUS ZenBook 14 OLED 14" UX3405CA-DS51T-CA Apple MacBook Pro M4 Max Lenovo Legion Pro Series Legion Pro 7i Gen 10 Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro NP940XHA-KG3US MSI Prestige PRE13EVOA2088 Microsoft Surface Laptop 7th Edition
CPU Intel Core Ultra 5 225H Apple M4 Max Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX Intel Core Ultra 7 256V Intel Core Ultra 7 258V Intel Core Ultra 7 268V
RAM (GB) 16 64 32 32 32 32
Storage (GB) 512 8192 1024 1000 1000 1024
Screen 14" 1920x1200 14.2" 3024x1964 16" 2560x1600 14" 2880x1800 13.3" 2880x1800 13.8" 2304x1536
GPU Intel® Arc™ 130T Graphics Processor Apple (40-Core) NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti Laptop GPU Intel Arc Intel Arc Intel Arc Graphics
OS Windows® 11 Home macOS Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Pro
Weight (kg) 1.3 1.6 2.7 1.2 1 1.4
Battery (Wh) 75 72 99 15 - 39
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamPortScreenCompactStorageReliability
ASUS ZenBook 14 OLED 14" UX3405CA-DS51T-CA 82.46453.283.877.484.553.758.2
Apple MacBook Pro M4 Max Compare 91.718.496.380.799.167.299.796.1
Lenovo Legion Pro Series Legion Pro 7i Gen 10 Compare 96.689.790.69894.68.481.578.5
Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro NP940XHA-KG3US Compare 66.96481.46893.585.373.878.5
MSI Prestige PRE13EVOA2088 Compare 63.76481.483.890.295.473.858.2
Microsoft Surface Laptop 7th Edition Compare 66.26493.362.486.886.881.578.5

Common Questions

Q: Can this laptop handle any gaming at all?

Realistically, no. The Arc 130T integrated GPU scores just 19.5 out of 100 in our gaming test, which means even older titles will struggle at native resolution. You can play casual 2D games or stream via cloud services, but don't expect playable frame rates in anything from the last five years.

Q: Is the OLED display good for photo and video editing?

Yes, with caveats. The screen covers 100% DCI-P3 and hits 400 nits, landing in the 76th percentile, so color accuracy and contrast are strong. However, the 60Hz refresh rate feels sluggish for timeline scrubbing, and the 1920x1200 resolution might feel cramped for 4K workflows. It's great for social media content and casual edits, but professionals who need high refresh or ultra-sharp detail may want a higher-end panel.

Q: What's battery life like?

We haven't run our formal battery test on this unit, but the 75Wh cell and Intel's efficiency-focused Core Ultra 5 225H should deliver a full workday of light tasks. Heavy CPU or screen-on-bright use will cut that significantly. There's no battery percentile data to lean on, so treat all-day claims as an estimate based on similar Core Ultra laptops we've seen.

Who Should Skip This

Anyone who needs gaming performance or GPU-accelerated work should skip this entirely. The 19.5 gaming score is a flashing red light. If you're a storage hoarder, the 512GB SSD (53rd percentile) will fill up fast with no user-upgradeable slot. Creatives who demand high refresh rates for smooth scrolling or ultra-sharp 4K timelines will also be let down by the 60Hz, 1920x1200 panel. At this $1450 price point, you can find thin-and-light competitors with discrete graphics or at least a more generous SSD.

Verdict

The ZenBook 14 OLED is a gorgeous, ultraportable notebook with a lovely screen and a CPU that punches above its weight class. If your day revolves around web apps, documents, and streaming video, you'll adore it. But the weak GPU and meager 512GB storage make $1450 a tough pill to swallow when Samsung and MSI offer OLED ultrabooks with more generous specs for less. It's a solid choice only if you prioritize weight above all else and rarely venture beyond basic tasks.

Usage Scores

Overall (66.6)Ai Llm (27.4)Gaming (19.7)Compact (76.6)Creator (34.1)Student (64)Business (65.3)Developer (65.2)Entertainment (71.4)

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