Gaming comes courtesy of Intel’s Iris Xe graphics, with a return of 50fps in Metro: Last Light at High settings and the screen’s native resolution. The panel is tuned for the sRGB colour space, covering 93% with an accurate average Delta E of 0.84, and whites do indeed look white thanks to a 6405K native colour temperature. Then again, you don’t need much swiping to navigate the 1,536 x 1,024 screen, which translates into 148ppi across the 12.4in diagonal. There’s no backlight, but the keys have enough feel to make it a pleasure to use, and we had no trouble hitting high speeds thanks to the faultless layout.Įven the touchpad oozes quality, with a smooth glass finish our one criticism is that it’s small at 100 x 67mm. If Microsoft is stingy here, it makes up for it in the quality of the keyboard, which is ludicrously good for the price. It’s also the obvious route for display output, with no HDMI port: one USB-A port and a 3.5mm audio jack complete the lineup. You have two routes when it comes to charging the Go 2, with Microsoft’s proprietary Surface Connect port on the right – there’s a 250g charger in the box – and a single USB-C port on the left.
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