Mac vs Windows - It's not close in 2026!
Chapters11
Initial impressions show Windows packages feel more utilitarian while Apple boxes seem premium, but the real value comes from included accessories such as chargers.
Mac wins overall in 2026, especially at the high end, but Windows pulls ahead on battery, storage, and unboxing value in the budget segment.
Summary
Mrwhosetheboss pits a $600 MacBook Neo and a $4,500 MacBook Pro against their Windows rivals from HP and Asus across 12 categories. He starts with unboxing, noting Windows includes a charger at both budget and high end, while Mac often does not. Build quality heavily favors the MacBook Neo in the $600 tier and the MacBook Pro at the high end, though the Asus ProArt P16 closes the gap on rigidity. Performance traces a clear edge for Mac in CPU-centric tests, with MacBook Pro outperforming Windows by a large margin in Geekbench 6, while the budget MacBook Neo lags in RAM but keeps up in practical tasks. Battery life paints a nuanced picture: high-end Windows struggles with power, while the budget Windows Omnibook 5 lasts over 8 hours thanks to a Snapdragon X chip. Storage favors Windows in both tiers, with Windows machines offering 512GB–4TB versus MacBook’s 256GB–2TB options. In ports, Mac’s MagSafe and Thunderbolt 5 at the top end beat Windows’ more mixed options, though Windows provides broader peripheral compatibility and gaming practicality. Keyboard, trackpad, and speakers favor Apple overall, with the MacBook Pro delivering the best input and audio experience. Display debates hinge on OLED versus LCD: HP’s OLED looks punchier but Mac’s higher resolution and brightness deliver accurate color and usability, while Asus ProArt Pro delivers a 4K OLED-like experience with touch. The software landscape keeps Windows advantaged for gaming and customization, yet Mac’s ecosystem and seamless features (AirDrop, iPhone-to-Mac copy-paste) remain compelling. A final drop-test reveals a dramatic verdict: the budget Windows laptop survives, while MacBook Pro and Neo sustain varying levels of damage, resulting in an overall score where Mac leads in the luxury category and Windows dominates the budget category. The takeaway: choose based on what's most important—top-tier Mac performance and build for professionals, or Windows’ value, battery efficiency, and broad software compatibility.
Key Takeaways
- MacBook Pro outperformed every Windows rival in Geekbench 6, with around 53% higher single-core scores versus Windows at the top end.
- Budget Windows (HP Omnibook 5) delivered 8 hours 8 minutes of battery life, beating both Mac options on endurance due to efficient mobile architecture.
- Windows laptops offer double the storage at the same price: HP Omnibook 5 has 512GB vs MacBook Neo's 256GB; Asus ProArt P16 offers 4TB vs MacBook Pro’s 2TB.
- MacBook Neo’s build quality feels superior due to a full aluminum block, while Asus ProArt P16 combines rigidity with military-grade heat/cold resistance but still isn’t on par with MacBook Pro.
- Thunderbolt 5 on the top-end Mac and MagSafe-like charging provide superior port experience versus Windows’ mixed port ecosystem.
- Input experience favors Apple: the MacBook Pro’s keyboard and large trackpad outperform budget Windows and MacBook Neo, with backlighting finally included on the Pro.
Who Is This For?
Tech enthusiasts comparing Mac vs Windows in 2026 who want actionable takeaways on price-to-performance, battery life, display quality, and everyday usability across budget and premium laptops.
Notable Quotes
"'Apple's new 2026 MacBooks have completely divided the internet.'"
—Opening framing of the debate and sets up the comparison.
"'the MacBook Pro outperforming every other laptop by a mile'"
—Highlights the Geekbench-like performance edge for the high-end Mac.
"'Budget Windows gives you a charger included'"
—Unboxing advantage for Windows at budget tier.
"'Thunderbolt 5 ports... can power two 8K displays at once'"
—Top-end port superiority for MacBook Pro.
"'The budget Windows laptop survives 8 hours and 8 minutes'"
—Battery endurance highlight for Windows at the budget level.
Questions This Video Answers
- Which MacBook is best for 2026: MacBook Neo or MacBook Pro, and why?
- Do Windows laptops still beat Macs for battery life in 2026, especially under load?
- Is OLED on Windows a meaningful advantage over MacBook's LCD in 2026 displays?
- What are the practical differences in port layouts between MacBook Pro 2026 and Windows laptops?
- How does gaming performance compare between Mac and Windows laptops in 2026?
MacBook NeoMacBook ProHP Omnibook 5Asus ProArt P16Windows vs Mac 2026Geekbench 6Thunderbolt 5MagSafeOLED vs LCDbattery life test
Full Transcript
Apple's new 2026 MacBooks [music] have completely divided the internet. There's one army who's insistent that this is RIP for Windows laptops and the other side arguing that actually Windows gets you a better display, more powerful chip, more RAM, more storage, basically more everything. So, let's settle this. We've got the featherweights, the $600 MacBook Neo versus the best $600 Windows laptop from HP. but then also the high-end heavyweights. The $4,500 new MacBook Pro versus the best $4,500 Windows laptop. We'll test them all across 12 categories to find out who reigns supreme in 2026. Whatever budget you're willing to spend, starting with the unboxing, which frankly doesn't really make a big difference apart from one key detail.
So, the Apple unboxings at both the basic end and the extreme end make you feel about as fancy as they always have, [music] but the Windows ones are planer. These laptops come presented in what looks more like a box you might find pizza in as opposed to a feat of modern engineering. But the reason that I actually side with Windows in this category is because you get a charger included. Both at the budget end with this HP Omnibook 5 and at the high end with this Asus ProArt P16, whereas Mac in the EU and the UK does not provide it.
And that can actually be a pretty expensive thing to buy separately with the MacBook Pros charger alone costing basically $100. So, as far as what really matters with the unboxing, that's a unanimous win for Windows. But it's a different story when you get the laptops in your hands because [music] I was not expecting how much better the MacBook Neo's build quality is versus [music] its HP Windows equivalent. Like, look at the hinge. Can you see how much give this HP has compared to the Mac, which pretty much only moves when you apply some proper force to it?
HP has some aluminium in the body, but the vast majority of the parts that you interact with are plastic, and that makes it feel a lot cheaper. Like, you can push down on the body and actually see it bend with a little bit of creaking, too, if you lean too hard on it. That is not the case with this MacBook Neo. The entire body is machined out of one big block of aluminium, and you can feel that sturdiness. I can't get a squeak out of it. But when you're willing to go high-end, I'd say that Windows reduces that gap.
This Asus is now definitely more rigid and apparently has military grade protection with the ability to withstand extreme heat and extreme cold, but is still not as premium as the MacBook Pro. It still feels plasticky in places, especially the underside. And the hinge still has that little bit more wobble than the MacBook Pros, which stays completely planted where you open it. This is even sturdier than the MacBook Neo's hinge, making this round a pretty clear KO against Windows. But the other side of the build quality coin is durability, which we will also test with an actual real drop test.
But we'll do that at the end so I can actually test everything else before I kill my darlings. Like the elephant in the room, performance, cuz it is absolutely true what people are arguing that if you go for a Mac, you get a lower spec for your money. Like this MacBook Neo has 8 GB of RAM compared to 16 on the HP. And even at the top end, the MacBook Pro here has 48 gigs of RAM compared to 64 on its equivalently priced Windows. But how much does that actually matter when you're trying to get stuff done?
So round one is a test of how long does it take to get started. I timed each laptop going from fully shut down to booted up, logged in, and ready to type into a Word document. And this shows a pretty clear advantage to the top-end MacBook Pro. It won by a landslide. Maybe this is just the insanely fast SSD speeds inside the thing. Round two is multitasking. So, I opened up in the background 20 identical internet tabs on each and an active Zoom call. And then the test was with all of that going, how long does it then take each laptop to open up an absolutely enormous spreadsheet on Excel?
The answer to which is a very similar result to the boot test with the MacBook Pro outperforming every other laptop by a mile and all the other three being clustered pretty close together. But what it also shows is that for an average user who's not realistically going to be doing any more than that, it doesn't look like the 8 GB of RAM on the MacBook Neo is going to cause any issues. It's not faster than the Windows at this stuff, but the important thing is it's not slower. And finally, round three is the Geekbench 6 CPU test, which actually is designed to simulate realworld applications, things like blurring your background in a video call and organizing your photo library.
And the higher the score, the better. And well, to put it simply, the MacBooks here eviscerate the Windows machines. At the top end, the MacBook Pro is scoring about 53% higher in single core performance versus Windows. At the entry level, the gap is even larger with a 70% higher score. Now, there is another side to performance, which we'll get to, but it seems pretty clear that as far as the day-to-day experience goes, MacBooks are on top. But then, I was curious, if the MacBook's day-to-day performance is so much higher, do you see that come at the cost of battery?
And to answer that question, I charged each one of these laptops twofold and just let them drain while doing a controlled combination of YouTube watching, light gaming, and video editing. And this is just as much a test of chipset efficiency as it is a test of battery size. Because [music] here in the world of laptops, let me tell you, there are enormous differences in chip power consumption. Something that becomes very apparent when looking at the high-end Windows laptop, which dies at just 4 hours 16, likely thanks to its RTX 5090 graphics card guzzling power even when it's not being pushed to its limit.
And even with this fairly poor battery life, this test also reinforces our performance test where you can see the MacBook Pro is rendering this video an order of magnitude faster than the Windows is able to. And so it kind of makes sense then that the MacBook Pro was the next one to clock out with a substantially longer run time of 5 hours 20. So when you're comparing flagship laptops, it's Apple's win pretty consistently cuz top-end Windows graphics cards are not power friendly. But then what I found fascinating is what happened between our featherweights. So, the MacBook Neo gave us pretty much bang-on the same runtime as the Pro, lasting only 6 minutes longer, which is kind of surprising given its absolutely miniature size and tiny battery.
But it's also kind of not given that the thing's powered by a chip that's very literally designed to run on a smartphone. But it's the budget Windows laptop that absolutely wrecked everything else here, holding on for 8 hours and 8 minutes. So this shows that if you can get a Windows with a decently large-siz battery like this one combined with an ultraefficient new Snapdragon X chip which is based on mobile architecture, then Windows has absolutely caught up on the battery front. And just like the RAM situation that we talked about earlier, you're also practically guaranteed to get more storage when you go Windows.
In both cases here, budget and pro are same price Windows machines have literally doubled the storage of their Mac counterparts. So instead of the MacBook Neo's 256 gigs, this HP has 512. And instead of the 2 TB that I managed to get on the MacBook Pro for my money, this Asus has four, which is just a massive and very clear win for Windows. Storage is one of those areas where Apple makes its biggest margins. So they will try to preserve that at all costs as long as those costs fall to you. Call quality is a pretty simple combination of how good does the webcam look [music] and how good does the microphone sound.
Let me show you. So, this is a recording from the budget Windows laptop. And first of all, the audio sounds absolutely terrible. I'm getting extreme friendly fire from what's supposed to be the noise cancelling in the background, but also the image processing sucks. Can you see how much it's struggling with the exposure in this image, especially with this light that we've added to simulate a window? That's a pretty normal thing for someone to have, right? The MacBook Neo is a lot better on that front. I mean, you can first of all tell how it's able to keep the image a lot more stable and the brightness on my face is preserved no matter what's happening around me.
That's pretty useful for a video call and also just the fact that my voice sounds like 100 times more natural. And then the MacBook Pro is similar in video quality, potentially slightly clearer, but the key change is the audio with this supposed studiograde microphone setup. It does add a lot of warmth to my voice. It's good to see that the Asus 2 does sound fantastic. Big fan of the microphone setup on this bad boy, but the image is bad. Thing's got enough graphics performance to power a small village, but it still can't seem to get rid of basic video noise.
So, as far as calling goes, it's a Macdub across the board. But what Windows loses in call quality, it makes up for in number of ports. You can tell that Apple as a company is much more calculated. They give [music] you the bare minimum for each tier of laptop to make sure that the more expensive MacBook Air and the MacBook Pro remain as tempting as possible. Other companies don't really care. So, while the budget Windows gives you a headphone jack, a full-size USBA port, and two USBC's with every one of these ports fast enough to qualify for the USB 3.2 standard, the Mac is just headphone jack and two USBC's, one of which is actually a slower USB 2 port.
So, you'd only really want to use that for charging as opposed to hard drives or external displays. But then when you humor Apple and you cough up for the most expensive MacBook Pro, then the situation is reversed. You do actually get the best of the best. Every USBC port you get on this is a blazing fast Thunderbolt 5 port. These are so rapid that just one of them can power two 8K displays at once, as well as uber fast data transfer and charging. The top end Windows is also good, but it's kind of a cocktail of different ports of various speed standards.
And also, most charging ports that you get on Windows laptops kind of suck compared to Apple's MagSafe. Magsafe could very well be the difference between a working pristine laptop and $45,000 worth of e-waste in a crumpled pile on the floor. Not to mention that almost every single high power Windows laptop requires a blooming construction brick as part of your power supply, which only adds to the risk of accidentally tugging your laptop off the table. So, while the port selection is extremely stingy on the most affordable Mac, at the top end, I would much rather have the MacBook setup than the Windows one, which means so far Windows is winning the battle at the bottom and Apple is winning at the top.
But while ports are something that will very clearly show up when you're flicking through a spec sheet, something that won't, but that are still absolutely critical for how your laptop feels to use, is the input experience, the keyboard and the trackpad. Cuz if they're bad, then that could be years of wrist strain and irritating accidental presses. Now, as you've probably heard, the MacBook Neo is missing one critical feature in this regard. Backlighting. Every other Mac has it. Basically, every other Windows has it. But the keys on this machine do not light up even in the dark.
And so if you are someone who hits peak productivity under moonlight, then this one emission alone might make the thing a write-off. Here's the thing though. I would still personally rather have [music] this than have this. The max keyboard just feels higher quality than the Windows where each key has this mushy signature to it. And the Max trackpad is a million miles better than the Windows one. It's got a smoother texture and you really feel like you have more precise control over your cursor when you're using it. Plus, even though it's now mechanical, so it's physically pressing down as opposed to the force touch that you get on higherend laptops that kind of simulates it, it's still so satisfying to click.
And I love the fact that you can click down anywhere on it as opposed to the Windows where you have to click down at the bottom of the pad only. So, what I'm saying is, do I like the idea of backlighting? Hell yeah. But would I personally give up backlighting to have a better keyboard and trackpad? Also, yes. And since the MacBook Pro fixes the missing backlighting of the Neo, I think it earns a win in the luxury category, [music] too. Don't get me wrong, the Asus trackpad's actually pretty good. It's massive. It's even got this little subsection that's like its own quick dial for settings.
But genuinely, there isn't a better trackpad right now on the market than you get on the MacBook Pros. Whether it's the responsiveness, the precision, the palm rejection, or the fact that you can click down anywhere on it, which even at this price tier, the Windows laptop still doesn't have. How about a speaker test? Starting with the budget MacBook, we are about to build our dream high-tech garden. We're going to add as much magic as we possibly can to turn the So, there's two sidefiring speakers here, and they sound fine, but not super direct. It's kind of like whoever you're watching on screen is sitting really far away from you.
It's like a 5 out of 10. budget windows. We are about to build our dream high-tech garden. We're going to add as much magic as we possibly can to turn. So, this has two downward firing speakers. So, they shoot into the table and then bounce off into your ears, but that extra layer seems to make it sound harsher and faker, like there's more processing in it. It doesn't sound like how we recorded that. Probably a four MacBook Pro. We are about to build our dream high-tech garden. We're going to add as much magic as we possibly can to Oh my god, so much better.
It's a very full sound, which kind of makes sense since there are six speakers in here compared to two. So 9 out of 10. Pro Windows laptop. much magic as we possibly can to This one is close. It is every bit as full sounding as the Mac, but just not quite as crisp. Probably an eight. Meaning that at both price points, I would say the Mac is slightly ahead, but not significantly. And this is a good point to talk displays because the thing that I'm seeing getting thrown around a lot online is that this HP has a better display than the MacBook Neo.
And you can see why people are saying that cuz this is an OLED panel compared to the MacBook's LCD. So, it's way punchier with colors. But I would disagree with the sentiment because first of all, while not as vibrant, this is a shockingly color accurate display for a $599 laptop. It may not pop as much, but looking at one of our videos on this screen, this is how I meant to look, not this. The Mac is also higher resolution with literally 50% more pixels, and its brightness is 500 nits compared to the HP's 300, which especially when you're talking these fairly low brightness numbers, is a crucial difference.
and you will struggle to see the HP outdoors. But for our flagships, it's impossible to argue with the screen that you get on this Asus Pro Art. It is a 4K resolution screen, higher than the MacBook Pro, OLED, so it's really punchy while also being bright and designed for accurate color. Oh yeah, and also it's a touch screen. Incredible. Videos on this thing are absolutely jaw-dropping. And you can make them all look even better with the Opera browser, our sponsor. I love that I can sharpen everything up with one tap. I love that you have all these dark themes that are really non-distracting and that any video will automatically pop out when I leave the tab so I can multitask while doing something else.
And just the fact that whatever I'm doing on this, I've got Opera AI on the side which understands what I'm looking at. That's a game changer because let's say I've got the product page open for this HP laptop. It never says the words USB 3. So if you want to know how many USB 3 ports it has, you can't just control F to find it. You'd have to read through the transfer speeds of each port and deduce it yourself. But this lets me just ask and it does the grunt work for me. So link below to download the Opera browser for free.
And for our display category then Apple wins at the budget end and Windows at the highest end. So so far then the Macs have won more than they've lost which just leaves the big one, the software experience itself and the drop test. And the drop test. Yes. So, there's obviously quite a lot within this software category, but I think we can break it down to a few key differences. The first is gaming because separate from day-to-day performance, Windows is a mile better of a platform to be gaming on. Partially because of the sheer number of games optimized for Windows, but also partly because the dedicated GPUs like the RTX 5090 in our high-end Windows laptops are made for this.
There's AI features, but I can't think of one thing that I've ever asked Apple Intelligence to do on a Mac that has actually saved me time. The same is true for Microsoft Copilot, but it's a little better, I guess. It can do things like automatically summarizing and recapping video calls once they're finished, and recall, which creates this searchable history of everything you've done just in case you forget something important. And Windows also has wider compatibility. Whether that's specialist software for professionals or the ability to work with any peripheral or the ability to make your laptop completely your own with customization, it would be very hard to argue that Windows is not [music] the more versatile tool.
But there's also a few things in Apple's court. Because assuming that the Mac can do everything that you need from your computer, then you will likely have a smoother experience doing so in Apple's closed ecosystem. Like nothing to this day on Windows beats the ease of air dropping from an iPhone to a Mac or just being able to hit copy on some text on your iPhone and then without any kind of setup just paste it on your Mac. And also, if you're like me and you focus a lot on small imperfections, you're much more likely to prefer the way the Mac looks and feels.
I mean, just as an example, I can't find a single animation on this $600 MacBook Neo that isn't running at a smooth 60 frames per second. Whereas on the $4,500 Windows, the thing will still just randomly feel laggy when doing simple things. And all these trending news and games for you widgets on Windows are really cheap and annoying in my opinion. Seriously, who is buying an RTX 5090 powered laptop, but then playing steel brain rot online on it. And I would also say that the Mac is less likely for most people to have issues. While Windows 11 is an improvement, Windows machines still work in a messier, more complicated way.
like you got the software layer made by Microsoft. You got the manufacturer, let's say Asus. And then you got all these individual parts like the AMD processor and the Nvidia graphics card that are present in different configurations in each different machine and each need their own drivers to tell them how to speak to each other. All of this creates a lot more room for error than MacBooks where Apple just takes charge of the entire end to-end experience. I mean, literally during the filming of this video, the Asus just conked out and stopped registering my left clicks.
And now, finally, it's time to find out which of these lovely laptops can survive a drop. Feel like I should clarify that we don't get sent these laptops. [music] Every single penny I might be about to burn is my own. I genuinely think this is the most expensive [music] science experiment we have ever done. Three, two, one. Freaking whacked my foot afterwards. God. Oh no. [laughter] 3 2 1 That was much worse. [music] Dear God, MacBook Pro. Please subscribe so I can buy more. Three, two, one, so heavy. That noise. Pro windows. Let's see about this military durability.
Three, two, one. Oh, kind of bounced a little bit. Wait, give me more. Yikes. Let's see the damage. Okay, so the MacBook Neo, you can see it's actually pushed the entire hinge. So, it's actually offkilter. So, the lid doesn't completely cover the base. And then inside, no way. Everything [music] is completely intact. It just looks like you had a slightly bad haircut on the right, but apart from that, that's incredible. Genuinely [music] scared to open the budget windows. [snorts] Oh, dear God. I mean, that [laughter] is a dead laptop. There is no work being done on this anymore.
MacBook Pro isn't closing completely flat [music] anymore. And inside, oh, it's shattered. I guess the insane weight of this thing all directed at one corner [music] was too much for it. Hearing a slight crunching sound coming from the inside of this. Oh god, this one's done, too. No, [laughter] the glass is shattered. displays not turning on [music] at all. But the backlighting still works, which means the MacBook Neo is the only laptop getting a point in this category, leaving us with the final scores in the budget category of 10 to Mac and 7 to Windows.
And then in the pro category, 10 to [music] Mac and six to Windows. So for me, Mac is the winner, but every category is worth different amounts and [music] especially different amounts to different people. So go through the list, see what's important to you, and make your decision according to that. Catch you in the next
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