Promises It's Not 'cutting Corners On The Things That... Alienware
As well as teasing a new ultraslim Alienware gaming laptop design Dell has also given us an early look at its new entry-level gaming laptops aimed at "ensuring that really there is a product for everyone" in its Alienware range.
Dell's COO, Jeff Clarke, spoke at the start of our CES 2026 pre-briefing in December about the company wanting to get back to its roots and also broaden its horizons. "It's a scale business, all 280 million units matter… You can't succeed if you're treating a portion of it like a distant relative... If I give you one thing to walk away with, it's the following: the consumer business is important to Dell."
The whole briefing felt very much like a mea culpa from the massive PC box shifter, but it looks like the company is putting its product where its marketing mouth is, what with the return of the XPS brand, reining back its effusive AI marketing, and throwing cheaper Alienware notebooks out into the wild.
The words 'Alienware' and 'entry-level' are not normally associated with each other, and it's perhaps a measure of where Dell finds itself right now that its traditionally premium-focused gaming brand is looking for a new market.
"This is an entry-level laptop that brings Alienware to that broader audience," says Alienware's head of product, Matt McGowan, introducing the new machine. He notes the system is still in development, and the fact that, like its new ultraslim design, it has no sub-brand name as yet suggests it hasn't been in development for that long, either.
"We aim to deliver the most bang for the buck with this new product," says McGowan. "Our goal is to hit price points hundreds of dollars cheaper than where we are today. And really the intent here is to bring more people into the Alienware family."
Given the RAMpocalypse is going to be spiking prices across the board when it comes to gaming PCs and laptops throughout 2026, offering a more affordable alternative actually within its premium brand could be a smart move for both Alienware and Dell itself. Especially as PC gaming remains a growing segment of the market.
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"More and more people want gaming PCs, but there's a lot of technology in here," says McGowan. "It's expensive to deliver a product that plays games well, but we wanted to attack that problem head-on.
"Now, this product isn't at the level of an Area-51, of course, but it's still built to our standa
Source: PC Gamer