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Review: MSI Titan 18 HX AI

MSI’s largest and most powerful gaming laptop is also its most premium, sporting a mini-LED screen and an invisible touchpad.
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Rating:

7/10

WIRED
Glorious mini-LED display. Chunky, mechanical keyboard. Top-tier gaming performance. Powerful Thunderbolt 5 ports.
TIRED
Finicky touchpad. Thick, large, and obtuse. Pitiful battery life. Crazy expensive.

The MSI Titan is not for the faint of heart—it never has been. It’s an 18-inch behemoth, fitting into that “desktop replacement” class of gaming laptop. This one in particular is meant for PC gamers who want not just top performance but also some bling.

You’ll be hard-pressed to find a gaming laptop with this many high-end features. With a mini-LED display, a mechanical keyboard, and an invisible haptic touchpad, there's no other 18-inch gaming laptop like it, and that means a flashy price too.

Big and Beautiful

The MSI Titan is massive. It’s 1.26 inches thick at its largest point and weighs nearly 8 pounds. You read that right. Eight whole pounds. Gaming laptops aren’t known for being particularly portable, especially ones with 18-inch screens, but the MSI Titan HX is almost a full pound heavier than the Razer Blade 18.

It’s hefty and well crafted, though, as you’d hope for in a laptop north of $5,000. It’s not a single piece of machined aluminum like the Razer Blade 18, but the magnesium-aluminum alloy chassis feels sturdy. The MSI Titan HX uses a thermal shelf on the back, making the laptop larger but also providing a protrusion for extra ventilation and ports. MSI keeps it fairly minimalist with the all-black interior and silver trim, especially compared to older versions of this laptop. The invisible touchpad makes this feel even more modern. And yet, both the Razer Blade 18 and Alienware 18 Area-51 are more savvy designs in my book.

Photograph: Luke Larsen
Photograph: Luke Larsen
Photograph: Luke Larsen

In the rear, you’ll find the power jack, the HDMI 2.1 port, and the Ethernet. Next to some massive vents, you’ll find three USB-A 3.2. Gen2 ports on the side, along with the two Thunderbolt 5 ports, the SD card slot, and a headphone jack. That’s just about every port you can imagine, but the Thunderbolt 5 ports are the interesting part.

Intel sent me several Thunderbolt 5 accessories to demonstrate just how much bandwidth the new spec provides. I set up two 32-inch 4K 240-Hz OLED gaming monitors, all powered through a single USB-C cable. It’s magical seeing those two high-refresh-rate monitors being daisy-chained together, despite their 240-Hz refresh rates. In the past, Thunderbolt 4 ports were limited to two 4K monitors at 60 Hz.

Even if you don’t have two expensive gaming monitors to connect to, the MSI Titan 18 HX has a really solid mini-LED display onboard. It can hit 414 nits of brightness in SDR and around double that in HDR. That’s not quite as good as the OLED gaming monitors out there, but it’s certainly bright enough to notice the difference in HDR. The color saturation is great too.

You want that 4K resolution when it's spread across 18 inches of screen, even if you may not always want to play games at that native resolution. It’s incredibly sharp. This really is the best screen you can get on an 18-inch laptop right now, as OLED isn't common in this larger screen size yet. MSI also offers an IPS version of this panel, as well as a lower-resolution 2,560 x 1,600 240-Hz IPS option.

Unfortunately, the speakers and webcam aren’t as premium. The 1080p camera is noisy, and the six-speaker audio system is mediocre. The speakers are almost irrelevant given how loud the fan noise is, at least when it comes to gaming.

Tricks Up Its Sleeve

Photograph: Luke Larsen

The keyboard is unique and an absolute joy to type and game on. It’s a Cherry MX low-profile mechanical keyboard that feels chunky and tactile. It’s unlike any laptop I’ve ever typed on in that sense, capturing the feel of a mechanical keyboard right on your laptop. My only complaint is that the many keys are not mechanical, such as the arrow keys, the number pad, and the function row. Once you notice, it’s a little jarring.

I like that MSI has included full-size arrow keys, though I think this layout could have been streamlined. MSI chose to use a larger left Control key, which didn’t leave room for a Function key on that side. It’s something most laptops have that most full-size desktop keyboards don’t. A bit more strangely, MSI includes a secondary forward-slash key on the bottom row, requiring much thinner Alt, Copilot, and Function keys.

Photograph: Luke Larsen

The invisible haptic feedback touchpad is less successful. We’ve seen these on laptops such as the Dell XPS 14, but this is the first time I’ve seen one on a gaming laptop. The implementation isn’t as smooth. I wouldn’t normally mind that the trackpad is embedded invisibly into the palm rests, but the location is odd. It’s centered across the palm rests, which is usually not the case when paired with a number pad. I found myself wondering where the edge of the touchpad was.

It’s also a loud click, and sometimes there appears to be a slight response delay when lifting your finger from a click. The result is an imprecise feeling that’s hard to be confident in. There are settings you can customize to choose from four sensitivity levels, but it didn't help much.

Extra Power

Let’s be clear: The MSI Titan 18 HX is the most powerful gaming laptop I’ve ever tested. It has the Intel Core Ultra 9 285HX and an Nvidia RTX 5090 Laptop GPU onboard, for a total of 270 watts of performance. That’s what MSI calls “desktop-level performance.”

I ran several games on it, including Cyberpunk 2077, Black Myth: Wukong, Red Dead Redemption 2, and Marvel Rivals. Regardless of the resolution, settings, or game, the MSI Titan sat at the top of my results. Unlike the same GPU found on thinner, smaller laptops like the Razer Blade 16, the Titan 18 HX can pull more frames out of it. It was around 10 percent faster in Cyberpunk 2077 and 18 percent faster in 3DMark Time Spy; that’s what that extra size and fan noise buys you.

That doesn’t mean every game can be played at max settings at the native resolution of 3,800 x 2,400. Not even the RTX 5090 can do that, at least not without the use of multi-frame generation. That’s why it’s still fairly uncommon to see this many pixels on a gaming laptop.

This isn’t necessarily the best laptop for playing competitive shooters. I had a blast playing Marvel Rivals, but you’re better off with a QHD 240-Hz screen, which can be found on just about every other gaming laptop out there. The 120-Hz screen is enough for smooth animation, but competitive gamers will benefit more from a faster refresh rate. For immersive, single-player games, you'll want to turn on Frame Generation and enjoy the crisp visuals at native resolution.

Cyberpunk 2077 is a good example where I had to crank up the DLSS quality settings to “Performance” and the multi-frame generation to 3X. The game still looks gorgeous, especially with Nvidia’s new DLSS Transformer model, but you’ll still run into the occasional artifact and deal with the input lag caused by using 3X or 4X, especially when your frame rate is already quite low due to the resolution. In Red Dead Redemption 2, the system averaged 66 frames per second on Ultra settings at native resolution without the use of DLSS.

I haven’t tested some similar-sized laptops from this year, such as the Alienware 18 Area-51 or the ROG Scar Strix 18. I’m guessing they will perform just as well, especially now that the Alienware option offers an RTX 5090 configuration. But it’s the 3,800 x 2,400-resolution screen that makes this such a unique gaming laptop. To make things even more extreme, my review configuration includes 64 GB of RAM and 6 TB of storage.

Photograph: Luke Larsen

All this comes at a cost. Literally in price, but also in battery life. While we've seen some gains in battery life on smaller gaming laptops, the MSI Titan 18 HX lives up to the stereotype gaming laptops have earned, only lasting a couple of hours away from the wall. It's not too surprising, but hopefully it's clear by now that laptops like this aren't meant to be mobile. Fortunately, the 99-watt-hour battery is user-replaceable if it ever needs to be swapped.

Redefining Expensive

The MSI Titan 18 HX isn’t just expensive—it’s almost absurd. The maxed-out retail price for the configuration I reviewed is roughly $5,899. That’s targeting a very specific audience. But let’s put things into perspective before balking at the price too much.

As of now, you won’t find an RTX 5090 gaming laptop for under $4,000. You won’t find many that are much more portable than this one, either. The Gigabyte Aorus Master 16 manages to get under an inch thick, but the Asus ROG Zephyrus G16 is the one that truly exists in a different category. I haven’t tested that one yet, and we know that manufacturers can adjust power levels and end up with worse performance, as we’ve seen with the Razer Blade 16.

As far as 18-inch gaming laptops go, the MSI Titan 18 HX is the most premium of the bunch, thanks to its 4K mini-LED screen. It has a couple of clumsy features, like the touchpad, and the RTX 5090 still isn’t as big of an uplift over the 4090 as I wish it were, but when it comes to absolute power, the Titan 18 HX pushes the limits.