HP revamps its Omen product line-up with a fresh logo, new pre-built desktops, and an IPS monitor
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Big changes have arrived for the Omen product family
By Cohen Coberly
In brief: HP's gaming-focused "Omen"
device line-up got some fresh new product additions today, including two
new pre-built gaming desktops and a G-Sync IPS monitor. Additionally,
HP revamped its Omen Command Center software and completely redesigned
the Omen logo.
Most of these new announcements
and changes will likely be viewed in a positive light by the community,
but the Omen logo revamp may prove particularly controversial. Instead
of the old tribal mask-like logo that Omen boasted, HP has changed it to
be much more simplistic.
It still has the same diamond shape, but it now features a simple
pink-to-orange color gradient and the word "Omen." There are no
distinctive shapes of any kind, and some have argued that this change
eliminates the Omen brand identity.
HP, for its part, is quite happy with the new logo, and feels the
fresh look will create a "new visual identity" that can "appeal to the
entire gaming community."
We'll let our readers decide whether or not the logo accomplishes
that task. For now, let's move on to HP's other Omen announcements,
starting with its two latest pre-built desktops; the Omen 25L and 30L.
Visually, the desktops look quite sleek, with modern, understated black
chassis and vibrant front-facing diamond-shaped LEDs.
When it comes to hardware, things get a bit confusing. HP vaguely
says the machines can house "up to" an RTX 2080 Ti or an RX 5700 XT, as
well as up to an i9-10900K or a Ryzen 9 3900. However, the company
doesn't say which machine can support which hardware -- they only list
the starting price for both machines, which is $900 for the 25L and
$1200 for the 30L.
HP's new Omen 30L.
Apparently, the 25L ships with an AMD Ryzen 7 3700X CPU, an RX 5700
GPU, and 16GB of DDR4-3200 RAM (expandable to a maximum of 32GB). As far
as storage goes, the 25L features two main drives: a 512GB PCIe NVMe
m.2 SSD, and a 1TB 7200RPM SATA HDD.
The 30L apparently has the same CPU as its smaller cousin (though it
appears to be watercooled in the product photos), as well as the same
RAM and storage specs. It does swap out the 5700 for an RTX 2060, but
that's the only major hardware change we were able to find, which seems a
bit unusual. We're not sure that baseline support for real-time
ray-tracing and a fancier case warrant a $300 price premium.
Since the "Shop Now" links for both machines still redirect to HP's
old Omen desktops, it's difficult to confirm exactly what the
configuration options are for these products. However, the desktops are
shipping out tomorrow, so those options will likely be available then --
if so, we'll come back and update this article with (hopefully) more
clear information.
Regardless, both machines ship with Windows 10 Home, a "Black Wired
keyboard and mouse" combo, and nearly-identical sets of external I/O
ports (see the full list here).
The final major Omen announcement of the day was HP's all-new Omen
27i, the company's first gaming-oriented IPS monitor. As we mentioned
earlier, it has G-Sync support, as well as a 27" screen with a
2560x1440p resolution and 350 nits of peak brightness.
It has a maximum refresh rate of 165Hz, and a 1ms response time,
achieved through overclocking. The monitor's bezels appear to be quite
thin, and the overall design is attractive enough by modern standards.
While the 27i is nothing revolutionary, it's a reasonably compelling
deal at $500 -- other IPS monitors with similar specs frequently cost
much more.
You can order a 25L or 30L starting tomorrow (May 5), but the Omen 27i is available for purchase now.
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