The ASUS ProArt GoPro Edition laptop is a standalone in the creator tools market, merging heavy-duty performance with a mobile form factor that can handle studio-quality work on the go.
Under the hood, it’s built around an Intel Core i9-13900H processor, 32 GB of DDR5 RAM, and a 1 TB NVMe SSD. That combination isn’t just for show—it keeps rendering times tight even when juggling multiple high-res video streams or AI-assisted editing layers.
What sets it apart is the built-in GoPro camera system: a 4K/60 fps primary lens with HyperSmooth stabilization, plus a secondary wide-angle module. The result? A single device that can shoot professional cinematic footage and then immediately jump into post-production without media transfer lag.
Key specs
- Processor: Intel Core i9-13900H (14 cores, 20 threads)
- Memory: 32 GB DDR5 (soldered)
- Storage: 1 TB NVMe PCIe Gen 4 SSD
- Display: 17.3-inch IPS, 4K UHD (3840 × 2160), 100 % sRGB, 100 Hz refresh
- Graphics: NVIDIA RTX 4090 (16 GB GDDR6)
- Camera: Dual GoPro modules—primary 4K/60 fps with HyperSmooth, secondary wide-angle
- Battery: 83 Wh, 55 W fast-charge
- Ports: Thunderbolt 4 (2x), USB-C, HDMI 2.1, 3.5 mm audio jack, 2.5 Gbps Ethernet
- Connectivity: Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.3, 5G module (optional)
The display is a 4K UHD IPS panel with 100 Hz refresh and full sRGB coverage—ideal for color grading without external monitors. The RTX 4090 graphics handle real-time ray tracing on the laptop itself, which is rare at this tier.
Who it’s built for
This machine is aimed squarely at video producers, motion designers, and live-streamers who need both capture and edit in one box. The GoPro integration means no extra camera body or cables; just open the lid and start shooting. For AI workloads—like automated video editing or background removal—the i9 processor and 32 GB RAM keep latency low even with multiple streams.
What remains to be seen
The only unconfirmed detail is whether the GoPro camera modules can record simultaneously in 4K on both lenses, or if they switch between primary and wide-angle. ASUS has not yet released a full spec sheet for the camera system, so users should treat that as a potential bottleneck.
Where it stands today
The ProArt GoPro Edition is already shipping with a suggested retail price of $3,999. It fills a niche between GoPro’s mobile setups and high-end workstations, but the premium price means it’s not for every creator—only those who genuinely need the camera-integrated workflow without sacrificing performance.