TL;DR
New Surface Laptop and Pro have haptic trackpads that vibrate during window snapping and editing. ARM-only via Snapdragon X2. Starting at $1,500.
Microsofts new Surface Laptop has a trackpad that rumbles like a game controller
New Surface Laptop and Pro have haptic trackpads that vibrate during window snapping and editing. ARM-only via Snapdragon X2. Starting at $1,500.
Microsoft's new Surface Laptop and Surface Pro feature a redesigned trackpad with haptic feedback that vibrates when you interact with Windows 11. Snap a window to one side of the screen and you feel it. Align an image in PowerPoint and the trackpad confirms the placement. Scrub a video timeline and the vibrations track the movement.
Microsoft VP for Surface Devices Brett Ostrum compared it to controller rumble in gaming. The haptics work across Windows 11 and various apps, not just Microsoft's own software. The Slim Pen also gets the same treatment.
The hardware underneath is Qualcomm's Snapdragon X2 platform, exclusively. The consumer Surface Laptop and Surface Pro ship with either a Snapdragon X2 Plus or Snapdragon X2 Elite. There is no Intel option. Microsoft reserved Intel's Panther Lake chips for the Surface Pro for Business line. If you want an x86 Surface, you need a corporate purchasing department.
The 15-inch Surface Laptop gets a sharper display at 261 PPI, up from 200 PPI on the previous generation. Battery life promises up to 20 hours on the 13.8-inch model and 19 hours on the 15-inch. Memory options range from 16 GB to 64 GB of RAM, with storage from 512 GB to 2 TB.
Prices start at $1,600 for the Surface Laptop and $1,500 for the Surface Pro, which does not include the Flex Keyboard ($360 extra). Those prices match the previous generation after Microsoft raised them due to memory and component cost increases. The starting spec is adequate but unremarkable. Anything with more RAM or storage will cost substantially more.
Microsoft has been pushing ARM on Windows since the original Surface Pro X in 2019. Compatibility has improved dramatically since then, but legacy Windows software can still produce odd driver issues on ARM. The bigger bet comes later this year with the Surface Laptop Ultra, which will use Nvidia's N1X chip built on Blackwell GPU cores, a machine aimed squarely at the MacBook Pro.
The colour options are the most visually distinctive part of the update. A clay-toned “Dune” Surface Pro and olive “Jade” laptop replace the usual black and grey. The haptic trackpad is a genuine usability improvement. Whether any of it justifies $1,500+ for a laptop that cannot run Intel software natively is the question Microsoft keeps answering with better colours and better vibrations.