HP OmniBook X Flip NGAI 14-fk0000
Specifications

Primary Camera: 5 MPix
Price comparison
Average of 5 scores (from 6 reviews)
Reviews for the HP OmniBook X Flip NGAI 14-fk0000
Source: PC Mag

If you're in the market for a reliable midrange 2‑in‑1 for creating or streaming, the OmniBook X Flip 14 holds its own, especially when on sale. With potent CPU performance, a color-rich OLED touch screen, and a sturdy metal build, it ticks most of the boxes you want. Still, the laptop's lattice‑less keyboard is an acquired taste, its battery life is weak compared with similarly priced alternatives, and its GPU was ho-hum among this comparison set. Regardless, this machine suddenly becomes hard to ignore when HP hits the sweet spot with a sale. This is a practical, premium 2-in-1 laptop for anyone looking for a capable Windows workhorse that travels easy. While we still point to the Asus ProArt PX13 as our Editors' Choice winner for high-end convertibles, HP's OmniBook X Flip is a fine alternative.
Single Review, online available, Medium, Date: 09/10/2025
Rating: Total score: 70%
Source: Windows Central

At retail price, you can get the OmniBook X Flip 14 for less than $1,000 already, but at that point it's worth paying extra for more power and storage. Those configurations? $1,099.99 at Best Buy for the AMD variant and $1,049.99 at Best Buy for the Intel variant. As I've already said, though, this laptop feels made to go on sale. I really like it even at full price, but I've seen enough discounts this early in the OmniBook X Flip's life span to know HP designed this laptop with deals in mind, rather than the premium choices among the best Windows laptops. If you want to configure your own HP OmniBook X Flip 14 (2025), those prices start from $1,129.99 at HP for the AMD versions and from $999.99 at HP for the Intel versions. The lowest possible prices, though, will get you the OmniBook X Flip 14 for $899.99 at Best Buy with AMD or $849.99 at Best Buy with Intel (just keep in mind those potential sales, it may be worth waiting).
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 07/21/2025
Rating: Total score: 80%
Source: CNet

The HP OmniBook X Flip 14 is an eminently configurable convertible laptop. Prefer Intel chips? Not a problem. Favor AMD? You can get those, too. Want to keep the price to a minimum? You can spend as little as $550. Willing to pay more for an OLED display? You can nab a sweet-looking, 3K-resolution OLED panel for only an additional $100. My test system features a number of upgrades, including the OLED display, and still costs a reasonable $1,150 at its sale price, direct from HP. That's a great price for a two-in-one with an OLED surrounded by a stylish and sturdy design. The 3K OLED panel doesn't do any favors for battery life, but it supplies the regular OLED goodies of incredible contrast with effectively zero-nit black levels and vibrant colors that pop. And the 3K resolution keeps things looking extra crisp, while the 120Hz refresh rate delivers smooth movement.
Single Review, online available, Medium, Date: 07/13/2025
Rating: Total score: 80%
Source: PC World

The HP OmniBook X Flip 14 is fine, but it just doesn’t have the sauce. It provides respectable performance and a gorgeous display, but trades battery life to deliver that. While Windows laptops have been seeing leaps and bounds forward in terms of battery life, the HP OmniBook X Flip 14 fails to take much more than a few steps forward. The AMD processor is part to blame, but HP bears some responsibility as well. When you then factor in that the system is a little boring, has a contentious keyboard, and comes with a price tag that puts it in dangerous waters, it just becomes a laptop that’ll be easy to overlook. When Asus can pack in a better CPU, discrete graphics, and make its system run longer for close to the same price, what shot does the HP OmniBook X Flip 14 really have? The answer: not a very good one, unless HP wants to keep the huge discounts it was offering toward the tail end of my testing.
Single Review, online available, Very Long, Date: 07/09/2025
Rating: Total score: 77%
Source: Andrew Marc David

Comparison, online available, Very Long, Date: 06/30/2025
Foreign Reviews
Source: Tweakers
NL→ENUser Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 08/07/2025
Rating: Total score: 80%
Comment
AMD Radeon 860M: A fairly powerful RDNA 3.5 architecture iGPU that debuted in early 2025 and a direct successor to the Radeon 760M. Its 8 CUs/WGPs (512 unified shaders) run at up to 3 GHz. DX12 Ultimate, ray tracing, AI image generation and other modern features are all supported here, as are many popular video codecs including first and foremost AVC, HEVC, VP9 and AV1. Its gaming performance is good enough for playing 2024 games in low graphics settings.
Modern games should be playable with these graphics cards at low settings and resolutions. Casual gamers may be happy with these cards.
» Further information can be found in our Comparison of Mobile Graphics Cards and the corresponding Benchmark List.
Ryzen AI 7 350: A relatively powerful Krackan Point family processor that was introduced in early 2025. The APU integrates 8 CPU cores (4 Zen 5 cores with up to 5 GHz and 4 Zen 5c cores with up to 3.5 GHz).» Further information can be found in our Comparison of Mobile Processsors.

