Compact 14-inch laptops usually have to make some compromises, like soldered memory or a limited number of ports. The Tuxedo InfinityBook Pro 14 Gen10 as well as the Windows counterpart XMG Evo 14 (M25) share a different approach. AMD's Zen 5 processors can be combined with up to 128 GB via two SO-DIMM slots. Our review unit was equipped with the AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 and the Radeon 890M, which offer good and stable performance figures. The fastest power profile is quite audible under load, but the other two profiles are noticeably quieter and still offer decent performance.
The port selection is also much bigger compared to many rivals, because a total of five USB ports is supported by HDMI, Gigabit-Ethernet, and a very fast card reader. However, one of the USB-A ports only supports the outdated 2.0 standard, which is just not justifiable in 2025. For all your storage needs, there are two full-size M.2-2280 slots, so you could install up to 16 TB of SSD storage.
The InfinityBook Pro 14 including TuxedoOS starts at €1199 and other Linux distributions are available as well. Tuxedo also always includes drivers for Windows, so you can set up a dual-boot system, for example. If you are not interested in Linux, you should consider the Windows counterpart XMG Evo 14 (M25), which costs €1149 (including Windows 11 Home) with a similar spec. Please see our full review of the new InfinityBook Pro 14 for more information.