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ASUS Vivobook Pro 16X OLED Laptop, 16” 16:10 OLED Display, Intel Core i9-13980HX CPU, NVIDIA® GeForce® RTX™ 4070 GPU, 16GB RAM, 1TB SSD, Windows 11 Home, 0°Black, K6604JI-ES96

  • Based on 62 reviews
Condition: Used - Like New
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Color: Black


Features

  • Intuitive ASUS DialPad: Change brush size, saturation and more to streamline workflow. Function settings are customizable in ProArt Creator Hub, learn more on ASUS website for details
  • ASUS VivoBook Pro 16X laptop comes with 16 3.2K (3200 x 2000) OLED 16:10 aspect ratio with ultra-slim NanoEdge bezels
  • Display: 120Hz refresh rate, 100% DCI-P3 color gamut, PANTONE Validated, TUV Rheinland-certified
  • Latest Intel Core i9-13980HX Processor 2.2 GHz (36MB Cache, up to 5.6 GHz, 24 cores, 32 Threads) with Intel UHD Graphics
  • NVIDIA Geforce RTX 4070 Laptop GPU, with 8GB GDDR6 - Studio Ready

Description

Get the ultimate creative experience with ASUS Vivobook Pro 16X OLED. It features the 16-inch 16:10 aspect ratio display, the latest Intel® Core™ HX55 desktop-level processor and an NVIDIA® GeForce® RTX™ 4070 Laptop GPU — empowering maximum performance for any task, no matter how tough. This powerhouse is chilled by ASUS IceCool Pro thermal technology, with dual fans and four vents to keep it cool and quiet. It’s also loaded with superb connectivity, including dual Thunderbolt™ 4 ports and a standard SD card reader for easy file transfers. With an onboard MUX switch and multi- dimensional Dolby Atmos audio built right in, Vivobook Pro 16X also delivers maximum productivity and entertainment. Get ready to create! The actual transfer speed of USB 3.2 (Gen 1 and 2), and/or Thunderbolt will vary depending on many factors including the processing speed of the host device, file attributes and other factors related to system configuration and your operating environment. For compatible apps, learn more at asus.com.

Brand: ASUS


Model Name: Vivobook Pro 16X


Screen Size: 16 Inches


Color: Black


Hard Disk Size: 1 TB


CPU Model: Core i9


Ram Memory Installed Size: 16 GB


Operating System: Windows 11 Home


Graphics Card Description: Dedicated


Graphics Coprocessor: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070


Standing screen display size: ‎16 Inches


Screen Resolution: ‎3200 X 2000 pixels


Max Screen Resolution: ‎3200 X 2000 Pixels


Processor: ‎5.6 GHz core_i9


RAM: ‎16 DDR5


Hard Drive: ‎1 TB SSD


Graphics Coprocessor: ‎NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070


Chipset Brand: ‎NVIDIA


Card Description: ‎Dedicated


Graphics Card Ram Size: ‎8 GB


Wireless Type: ‎802.11ax


Number of USB 3.0 Ports: ‎2


Brand: ‎ASUS


Series: ‎Vivobook Pro 16X


Item model number: ‎K6604JI-ES96


Operating System: ‎Windows 11 Home


Item Weight: ‎8 pounds


Product Dimensions: ‎13.98 x 0.86 x 9.8 inches


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎13.98 x 0.86 x 9.8 inches


Color: ‎Black


Processor Brand: ‎Intel


Number of Processors: ‎24


Computer Memory Type: ‎DDR5 RAM


Flash Memory Size: ‎1 GB


Hard Drive Interface: ‎Thunderbolt


Optical Drive Type: ‎No Drive


Voltage: ‎20 Volts


Batteries: ‎1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included)


Date First Available: May 3, 2023


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Nice quality computer
Top computer, works perfect for me as an architect. Autocad, Revit, Lumion, SKP, photoshop... all of them runs perfect. The battery life is not the best, but running that kind of software consumes a lot. I'm using a cooling pad, sometimes it get hot and need some help. But overall its performance is very top. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 13, 2025 by david alvarez david alvarez

  • Beautiful screen image for a laptop
Color: Black
Unmatched screen for a laptop in its price range. Would be very good for editing pictures. Crisp clear lettering and very good color right out of the box. Wifi is fast and has not lost connection so far. Processor is fairly fast but I don't really do any gaming or really heavy processing to need anything faster or more powerful. Battery life could be better but I imagine the screen performance does have a bit of an effect on it. Is nice to have USB charging and will charge fast with proper higher powered cable. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2025 by MRC

  • Worth purchasing for a lot of people, but some annoying problems and false advertising.
Review I purchased a K6604JV-ES94 Asus Vivobook Pro 16X OLED Laptop at 16" with an i9-13980HX, 4060, 16GB Ram and 1 TB SSD. This is definetly the version of this laptop to buy since it has the 150W TDP for the combined CPU + GPU. Asus has confusingly similarly named products with drastically lower TDPs. And even with this product, while they disclose the 150W combined TDP, and hidden deep in the specs on their website you can see the 105W CPU TDP, they refuse to disclose the actual GPU TDP. A Google Bard search claims it might be 95W from a deleted forum post, but that may not be accurate. The screen looks good, and the keyboard feels great, though I don't have much to compare them to. The build quality overall feels good, but the display is extremely thin and feels like it could be easily damaged. This is also definitely a step up in weight from my old 14" laptop. It is to be expected with the size and hardware inside, but a backpack with the laptop, charger, and a binder for school work, feels pretty heavy, and can wear you down after extended use/backpack carrying. Once you open it though, the bigger screen makes everything easier on the eyes. The size is worth the weight, as when you go back to a smaller screen, you feel it. I have not opened my laptop, but the BIOS claims my laptop came with a 1 TB Solidigm P41 Plus SSD, which is a decent reliable option, but for a laptop in this price range, a QLC drive with reduced endurance, in a product that claims in its name that it is made for professionals, is disappointing. This wouldn't be as bad if I could install a secondary TLC drive to work with files on, but this laptop only has a single storage drive slot. I would also like to note that another reviewer mentioned getting a Samsung drive, so what drive you get can vary. But a note should also be made that the other reviewer also purchased the laptop earlier on in the product cycle so it could be possible that they are starting with top of the line hardware and then cheapening the product after reviews are out. I have not opened my laptop to check the RAM situation, as once you open a laptop, you need to purchase a product similar to Loctite to stop screws from vibrating there way to falling out of a laptop once reassembled, and I don't need to open the laptop yet. For those who don't know, RAM can be soldered on (non user replaceable), or installed in one slot or two (or even have be soldered and a ram slot). This is important since dual channel RAM where there are two separate groupings of the same size RAM is slightly faster, but manufacturers who place a single RAM stick in allow the user to add another stick to double the RAM capacity and have duel channel down the line, rather than have to throw out the old ram and purchase two new sticks instead of only one. For example if a laptop comes with a 16 GB stick, then adding one more will get you to 32 GB. If it comes with two 8 GB sticks it will be slightly faster, but you will have to throw them out and purchase two 16 GB sticks to upgrade (thus I prefer single stick, or a soldered 16 GB with an extra RAM slot). I have not had much time to game but it has been enjoyable on older titles, though I haven't analyzed the frame rate or looked at newer titles. The WiFi range is okay most of the time. Sometimes I have to move to a different room, especially for Zoom meetings, and occasionally I will be disconnected from game server, but I've had issues with other devices in those locations, though in their case less often. Nahte27 on reddit has recommended the AX411 WiFi card as a good replacement and says he's found success with it, though I haven't tried it yet and cannot guarantee that it is compatible. It should also be noted that if you run Linux on it at all, the WiFi card that came with my laptop is not supported so you will have to run off of ethernet, which sucks for this form factor. Linux seems to run fine (make sure to have the MUX switch not set to direct to the NVIDIA GPU, which will only be a problem if you change it yourself. There also may be a way to get it to work with installing proprietary drivers or finicking with settings but I haven't messed with it). But none of this would have been a problem if the laptop came with an Intel Wi-Fi 6E adapter like the Asus K6604 video claims that it would. On the Windows Device Manager my laptop says it came with a MediaTek Wi-Fi 6E network adapter. MediaTek sucks. Everyone knows Intel ones are better, which is why they likely advertised that it came with an Intel one. This false advertising, literally lying that the laptop does not come with the subpar parts it actually comes with, is reprehensible. More likely it was just a mistake by the video host or specs were updated later and there were miscommunications, and to be fair the product page itself says simply that it is a Wi-Fi 6E adaptor without mention of brand, but false advertising is false advertising, and they should send everyone who brought this laptop an Intel one to replace the MediaTek adapter. It does though have an ethernet port, which is a great benefit in cases where there are issues with Wi-Fi, and it certainly helps with this situation. The manufacturer likewise locks down the BIOS/settings changes. The battery life is poor (I may update with exact figures when I have time to test), so the logical option would be to disable features such as Intel Turbo Boost and undervolt or underclock the processor when on battery attending meetings, but these options are not accessible in the BIOS and programs such as XTU and Throttlestop will not work to undervolt it, which seems a crime when there is an i9 in this. With the newly purchased product before the expected battery degregation, an hour long Zoom meeting took the battery down from either 80% or 90% (can't remember which) to about 52-55% (and that's with reducing the display resolution, frame rate, and other tweaks. I will have to do a proper test at some point without listing the outcome by memory). It's usable for now as long as a charger is brought to school, but with battery degradation, who knows for how long. There are also privacy risks with this device. It's running Windows so there are the standard Microsoft issues, but ASUS locks all the computer controls such as the fan profiles, MUX switch and the battery care mode (limiting the battery to 80%, thank you Asus for including it) behind having to create an Asus account and some extremely long privacy policy that nobody has the time to read through nor the capability to avoid the extortion unless they throw this machine which is over $2,000 after taxes in the trash. I have since stumbled upon some keyboard shortcuts for the fan/performance settings but I am not sure whether they work before setting up an account. It should also be noted that a lot of other manufacturers do the same thing, but that doesn't make it ok. One place where they don't skimp on is the ports. I absolutely love that there are four USB ports (two Type-A and two Type-C) independent of the main power port. It means you can actually be using the USB ports and have a spare in case you need to get photos or a scan off of a device and not have to worry about unplugging anything. Having two Type-C and two Type-A is the perfect balance, and I commend them for including them. And the Type-C are Thunderbolt and support Type-C charging which is a great (though I haven't verified the speeds/charging). Overall it's a decent option and I love that it doesn't have the obnoxious gamer look. It also has a MUX switch which is amazing and I'm glad to see more manufactures supporting (though you have to restart the computer to use it so every time you decide to leave your desk you have to restart the computer and thus close all your programs unlike with some other MUX switches if you wish to utilize it. It's also great that it has a backup integrated GPU in case the high power NVIDIA one burns out for some reason, but basic issues like not being able to undervolt/clock so one can have the battery life one needs to attend multiple meetings or last a full day of school, the spotty WiFi, the privacy issues, and the outright lies about the specifications, make it frustrating. It's worth purchasing for the large calibrated OLED display, CPU/GPU (with medium power budgets), and it being under $2,000, but these flaws are why this machine is so cheap. Make sure that they are not deal breakers before you purchase this device. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 11, 2023 by Duffy bubba

  • Great screen, bad engineering
This laptop is light, easy to handle and has the most beautiful and bright screen I’ve seen on a laptop or monitor. It’s fast, the cooling is good unless you run a high graphic demand app or game. It gets very loud but cools well. I have two issues with it. First, it black screens (BSOD) too much on anything. I made sure the drivers were updated, ASUS service had me reset the bios, installed the updated bios, modified the app settings to use less than full graphic capacity and got a powered cooling board. Made no difference. I played Diablo 4 at both medium and low settings and got the BSOD regardless. I reinstalled the game (no change) and reinstalled the entire system (no change). I opened up one of the ASUS provided photo apps and it gave me the same result (BSOD). I called support twice. Once got the bios reset done which had no affect and the second time was told I’d get a call back from a tech … later. As much as I liked the size, weight and screen, I could no longer accept it as a viable solution as a follow- on laptop. There is an engineering or software flaw in this laptop that causes the BSOD. Being a systems engineer I did run some intensive diagnosis on the device to see if I could find anything pointing to some kind of engineering or design flaw. Unfortunately, I got BSODs trying to run the analysis that could never get a log to say what or where it failed at. It left me very frustrated. If the second call the service rep would have offered a replacement, I’d would have accepted that. All I was told by the customer rep was to ship it to them and they would look at it. So I would be out an $1800+ laptop and still be liable for the payment. I have used and currently use other ASUS products with no issues. Very, very disappointed. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 15, 2023 by BaltesMX

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