Specs alone tell you the Alienware Area-51m is cut from a completely different cloth versus other gaming laptops. The first clue is the Core i9-9900K processor on board -- a full-fledged desktop CPU that sits in an LGA1151 socket, not soldered to its motherboard. This is arguably one of the best gaming CPUs on the desktop right now, with a 5GHz Turbo Boost clock speed and an octal-core architecture with a fat 16MB of cache. Frankly, it's a faster gaming CPU in a lot of cases versus our own desktop graphics test bed CPU of choice, Intel's 18-core Core i9-9980XE, but more on that later.





From there, other specs in our configuration portend the same level of desktop platform bandwidth and graphics power. Pixels are pushed courtesy of a full-fat NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 driving a 17.3-inch, 144Hz, 1080p IPS display that is NVIDIA G-Sync equipped. Bits and bytes are served by a dual 512GB PCIe NVMe SSD setup in RAID 0, for a total of 1TB of snappy solid state media, backed up by another 1TB spinning SSHD hybrid hard drive with 8GB of Flash memory cache.We also have 32GB of DDR4-2400 RAM on board, that is expandable to 64GB via four SODIMM slots. So yeah, room for growth here in a number of areas, beyond just memory, is a strong suit for this machine and that's another aspect of the design that's unique; all of these components including the CPU and GPU, are accessible and user serviceable/upgradable.More on this on the pages ahead, but as you might expect, for a system like this to run at full performance, you'll need serious power delivery. In this case, though Dell-Alienware offers multiple AC adapter bundles at various power ratings, our machine came equipped with the beefiest 300 Watt brick combined with a 180 Watt brick. The machine will actually get by with just the 180 Watt adapter plugged in for general use, but for full performance you're going to want both slabs of power delivery plugged in and at your disposal.Let's get a closer look at the skins and what makes this machine tick, next...