Samsung Samsung Galaxy AI Book 4 Edge Copilot+ Laptop Review

Samsung's new AI Book packs a CPU in the 93rd percentile for just $239. The catch? You get a bottom-tier screen and graphics to match. It's a bizarre, fascinating value proposition.

CPU Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus X1P-64-100
RAM 16 GB
Storage 1 TB
Screen 15.6" 1920x1080
GPU Qualcomm X1
OS Windows 11 Home
Weight 1.8 kg
Samsung Samsung Galaxy AI Book 4 Edge Copilot+ Laptop laptop
54.2 Общая оценка

Overview

The Samsung Galaxy AI Book 4 Edge Copilot+ laptop is a weird one. It's built around Qualcomm's new Snapdragon X Elite chip, and that CPU is a monster, landing in the 93rd percentile. That means it's faster than almost every other laptop CPU out there. But then you look at the rest of the package: a basic 1080p 60Hz screen, integrated graphics, and a gaming score that's basically a joke at 14.2 out of 100. So you've got a brainiac in a budget body.

It's a Copilot+ PC, which means it's built for AI tasks and promises long battery life, though we don't have the exact mAh number. At 1.77kg, it's light and portable. But with a starting price of $239, you have to ask what corners were cut to hit that number. This isn't a balanced machine. It's a CPU specialist with some serious compromises.

Performance

Let's talk about that CPU. The Qualcomm X1P-64-100 is a 10-core beast that hits 3.4GHz, and it puts this laptop in the 93rd percentile for processing power. For coding, compiling, or heavy multitasking, this thing will fly. It's paired with 16GB of DDR5 RAM, which is right in the middle of the pack at the 50th percentile, so it's decent but not exceptional.

The GPU is where the dream ends. The integrated Qualcomm X1 graphics land in the 36th percentile. That's fine for basic tasks and video playback, but it's not for gaming or any serious graphical work. The storage is a 1TB SSD, sitting at the 57th percentile, which is solid for the price. The overall 'Best For' scores tell the story: it's mediocre for developers and students (mid-50s), and a disaster for gaming. This is a one-trick pony, but that one trick is really, really fast.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 93.5
GPU 36.2
RAM 52
Ports 53.5
Screen 18.1
Portability 48.5
Storage 59.8
Reliability 71.5

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong cpu (93th percentile) 94th
  • Strong reliability (75th percentile) 72th

Cons

  • Below average screen (16th percentile) 18th

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus X1P-64-100
Cores 10
Frequency 3.4 GHz
L3 Cache 6 MB

Graphics

GPU X1
Type integrated
VRAM Type Shared

Memory & Storage

RAM 16 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 1 TB

Display

Size 15.6"
Resolution 1920 (Full HD)
Refresh Rate 60 Hz

Connectivity

HDMI 1 x HDMI 2.1
Wi-Fi WiFi 7
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.3

Physical

Weight 1.8 kg / 3.9 lbs
OS Windows 11 Home

Value & Pricing

At $239, the value proposition is bizarre and compelling. You are getting a top-tier CPU for less than the price of a budget Intel laptop. No other machine with a 93rd percentile CPU comes close to this price. However, you're paying for that CPU with a terrible screen and weak graphics. It's a fantastic deal if your workload is almost entirely CPU-bound and you don't care about display quality. If you need a balanced machine for general use, the value evaporates quickly because those other components will hold you back.

$239 Unavailable

vs Competition

Compared to the Apple MacBook Pro with M4 Max, you lose everywhere except price. The MacBook has a better screen, GPU, and likely battery life, but costs many times more. Against a Windows competitor like the Lenovo Legion Pro 7i, the Galaxy Book gets crushed in GPU performance (36th vs. likely 90th+ percentile) and screen quality, but the Legion is a heavy, expensive gaming laptop. The more interesting fight is with something like the ASUS Zenbook Duo. The Zenbook offers a unique dual-screen form factor and likely a better display, but its Intel or AMD CPU won't touch the Snapdragon X Elite's raw multi-core speed. You're trading pure CPU grunt for versatility and a better overall experience.

Spec Samsung Samsung Galaxy AI Book 4 Edge Copilot+ Laptop Apple MacBook Pro Apple 14" MacBook Pro (M5, Silver) ASUS ROG Flow ASUS 13.4" Republic of Gamers Flow Z13 2-in-1 Lenovo Legion Lenovo 16" Legion Pro 7i Gaming Laptop MSI Vector MSI 16" Vector 16 HX AI Gaming Laptop Microsoft Surface Laptop Microsoft 13.8" Surface Laptop Copilot+ PC (7th
CPU Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus X1P-64-100 Apple M5 AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395 Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100
RAM (GB) 16 32 32 32 32 32
Storage (GB) 1024 4096 1024 2048 2048 1024
Screen 15.6" 1920x1080 14.2" 3024x1964 13.4" 2560x1600 16" 2560x1600 16" 2560x1600 13.8" 2304x1536
GPU Qualcomm X1 Apple (10-Core) AMD Radeon 8060 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 Qualcomm X1
OS Windows 11 Home macOS Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Home
Weight (kg) 1.8 1.5 1.2 2.7 2.7 1.3
Battery (Wh) - 72 70 99 90 54

Verdict

The Galaxy AI Book 4 Edge is a niche product with a clear identity crisis. It has a world-class CPU trapped in a budget laptop's body. If you are a developer who runs virtual machines or compiles code all day on an external monitor, and you're on a razor-thin budget, this could be a secret weapon. For literally anyone else—students, general users, content creators—the terrible screen and weak graphics make it a hard sell. At $239, it's a fascinating tech experiment, but not a well-rounded daily driver.