Skip to main content

This is the most bizarre gaming laptop I’ve ever seen

The Acer Project DualPlay laptop.
Luke Larsen / Digital Trends
IFA 2024
This story is part of our coverage of IFA Berlin 2024

Acer is cooking up something very interesting at IFA 2024. The company revealed Project DualPlay, which is a laptop concept with several interesting tricks up its sleeve. Closed, it’s a relatively standard clamshell design, but once you open the lid, Project DualPlay pulls things off that I’ve never seen before, even from the best gaming laptops.

For starters, it includes a detachable controller. It doesn’t look like some dinky afterthought, either. The controller is built into the touchpad of the laptop, and it’s held in place with an electromagnetic lock. You can place two fingers on a release button on the keyboard to unlatch the controller, allowing you to kick back and play without lugging around an extra controller.

Someone holding the Acer Project DualPlay controller.
Luke Larsen / Digital Trends

As if that weren’t enough, Acer took some pointers from the Nintendo Switch and made each side of the controller detachable. You can unlatch both sides from the center trackpad and use them as separate controllers for local multiplayer games.

Recommended Videos

The controller charges while connected to the laptop, but each side of the controller can also be charged individually with the corresponding USB-C port.

The controller on Acer's Project DualPlay.
Luke Larsen / Digital Trends

The controller is the main draw, but Project DualPlay has a few other elements going for it. When you pop out the controller, Project DualPlay also ejects stereo 5-watt speakers, which live on the sides of the laptop like wings.

As we’ve seen on laptops like the Zephyrus G16, large speakers like this can make a massive difference when playing games, filling out the low-end while still providing enough detail in the highs.

The Acer Project DualPlay laptop with the controller attached.
Luke Larsen / Digital Trends

Bringing the concept together is a boatload of RGB lighting. Acer put customizable RGB strips along nearly ever edge of the laptop. It wraps around the keyboard, the trackpad, and the controller’s joysticks, and Acer even managed to cram RGB around the screen bezels. Acer also highlighted an “infinity mirror lighting bar” around the back of the laptop, but it hasn’t shared any images showing the back of the laptop yet.

Of course, the controller takes up valuable space in the laptop’s chassis that would normally be used for a larger battery. We have confirmed that Project DualPlay does, indeed, have a battery, but a smaller one to compromise with the limited space.

We’re in Berlin for IFA 2024 checking out the latest products, and Acer thankfully has the Project DualPlay on display. It definitely takes the crown as the most interesting project Acer has announced this year, superseding the new Nitro Blaze 7 handheld and the world’s first 600Hz gaming monitor.

Jacob Roach
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
Lenovo completely redesigned my favorite gaming laptop from last year
Lenovo Legion Pro 7i laptop sitting in front of a window.

Hands down, if you ask me what the best gaming laptop is, I'll point you toward the Lenovo Legion Pro 7i. It's speedy, reasonably priced, and it has a fantastic keyboard -- just read our Lenovo Legion Pro 7i review. So, you can imagine my surprise when Lenovo told me that it was completely throwing out its winning formula to fully redesign the laptop for CES 2025.

It looks like the redesign could pay off, though.

Read more
This ingenious ROG gaming laptop is user-upgradeable — no screws required
Asus ROG Strix Scar 16

Asus has announced a number of new gaming laptops at CES 2025, but one of the standouts this year has a unique feature: a completely tool-less upgrade system that you can easily access yourself.

The redesigned ROG Strix Scar 16 and 18 both use a simple, magnetic latching system that lets you open the bottom panel and access the internal components within seconds. In particular, you can reach the RAM and M.2 SSD and swap them out, without even requiring a screwdriver. You can pack up to 64GB of DDR5-5600 memory inside, as well as up to 4TB of PCIe 4 SSDs in RAID 0.

Read more
Acer made an 11-inch handheld gaming PC, and it’s the craziest thing I’ve seen at CES
Someone holding the Acer Nitro Blaze 11 handheld.

I mean, just look at that picture. That's all you really need to see what I mean by calling an 11-inch handheld the craziest thing I've seen at CES 2025. There are always plenty of wacky concepts coming out of the Las Vegas Convention Center, but the Acer Nitro Blaze 11 takes the cake for not only being the largest handheld gaming PC I've seen but also being a real product that's set to hit store shelves this year.

Outside of the screen size, the Nitro Blaze 11 is a fairly conventional handheld. It comes packed with an AMD Ryzen 7 8840HS chip, along with 16GB of LPDDR5X memory at 7,500MT/s and up to 2TB of storage. The Ryzen 7 8840HS is identical to the familiar Ryzen Z1 Extreme available in handhelds like the Asus ROG Ally, at least when it comes to core configuration, architecture, and clock speed. The main difference is that the Ryzen 7 8850HS is set to run at 28W in its default configuration while the Ryzen Z1 Extreme runs at 15W. Thankfully, the default power is something Acer can tweak.

Read more