PCMag editors select and review products independently. If you buy through affiliate links, we may earn commissions, which help support our testing.

First Look: MSI Launches Biggest (and Smartest) Laptop Touchpad Ever

We went hands-on with MSI's latest Raider gaming laptop, whose touchpad surface area expands on command to XXL size. (Plus, you can set up a wealth of pop-up shortcuts on it.)

 & John Burek Executive Editor and PC Labs Director

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

Our Expert
LOOK INSIDE PC LABS HOW WE TEST
65 EXPERTS
43 YEARS
41,500+ REVIEWS

Who expected the humble touchpad to be a Computex 2023 star? At its laptop press event, MSI showcased its commitment to innovate new features in some of its existing product lines. One of the more notable additions is the recently launched Smart Touchpad on its aptly named premium gaming laptop, the Raider GE78 HX Smart Touchpad.

We’ve seen some touch-based LED interfaces embedded in touchpads before, most notably on some rival Asus machines, but the Smart Touchpad is kicking it up to a whole other level. Not only is the full touch surface much larger than most (MSI calls it the largest ever on a laptop), but you'll find an array of digital commands and shortcuts at your fingertips. Read on for details, and check out the photos of the layout as you go.


Introducing the Smart Touchpad

The wide view of all this: The Smart Touchpad allows swift on-pad access to frequently used functions with a single tap, alongside customizable instant-access functions.

MSI Raider GE78 HX Smart Touchpad

Look no further than our photos here for the types of commands you will find on the digital grid. You have quick buttons for the camera, recording, files, key lighting, and Bluetooth, among others. These are located right next to the touchpad, rather than needing to move your hands up to the function row. Additionally, available macro buttons (the M1 to M5 ones) can be customized with different inputs.

MSI Raider GE78 HX Smart Touchpad

You can toggle all of these buttons off, or the entire touchpad area, with the persistent touch buttons on the right side. If you turn just the grid off, the space will be given back to the touchpad. With the buttons active, you'll see a fairly standard amount of touchpad space, but turning them off makes this touchpad truly titanic, with plenty of room. In this form, it is the largest touchpad we've ever seen on a laptop, for sure.

As mentioned, we became pretty familiar with this general concept through the touchpad LED number pads seen on a selection of competing Asus laptops. The Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo 16, in addition to the second display, has a touchpad toggle for this. Those were largely limited to numpad functionality, though, which is still a fine way to add one when you're out of physical space. This is a much more complex integration.

MSI Raider GE78 HX Smart Touchpad

While not everyone will have a use for all these shortcuts (at least, not enough to justify it as their main reason to purchase this laptop), it's pretty cool in practice, and looks like it works as intended. More than that, it's a key differentiator; it seems particularly useful to power users and multi-taskers, especially if you're a streamer or content creator who wants to keep your broadcast or workflow running smoothly.

On the software front, MSI has also leveraged the potential of generative AI by integrating the Microsoft Edge version of the AI Artist app into its laptops, offering a more intuitive and faster way of generating photo-realistic images without the risk of data leakage, particularly for creators.


Oh, This Raider Laptop is No Slouch, Either

This advanced touchpad doesn’t exist in a vacuum, of course, and it’s attached here to the Raider GE78 HX Smart Touchpad, as mentioned. The model is named thus because the MSI Raider GE78 exists outside of this Smart Touchpad version; we first published a hands-on from CES earlier this year.

MSI Raider GE78 HX Smart Touchpad

That earlier model features a traditional touchpad, so as the name suggests, you’ll need this model at hand for the Smart Touchpad. The core additions that made the other model noteworthy, though, are here too. That primarily includes Intel 13th Gen "Raptor Lake" processors and Nvidia’s GeForce RTX 40 Series GPUs.

The Raider GE78 HX Smart Touchpad can pack up to a Core i9-13980HX CPU, an Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 GPU, 32GB of memory, a 2TB SSD, and a 17-inch QHD+ (2,560-by-1,600-pixel) resolution display.

MSI Raider GE78 HX Smart Touchpad

If you’d like to combine gaming chops like those with the versatility of the Smart Touchpad, this may be the gaming system you’ve been waiting for. It will launch online in June, and you can pre-order a top-end model with the above-listed specs now for $2,699.

About Our Expert

John Burek

John Burek

Executive Editor and PC Labs Director

My Experience

I have been a technology journalist for almost 30 years and have covered just about every kind of computer gear—from the 386SX to 64-core processors—in my long tenure as an editor, a writer, and an advice columnist. For almost a quarter-century, I worked on the seminal, gigantic Computer Shopper magazine (and later, its digital counterpart), aka the phone book for PC buyers, and the nemesis of every postal delivery person. I was Computer Shopper's editor in chief for its final nine years, after which much of its digital content was folded into PCMag.com. I also served, briefly, as the editor in chief of the well-known hard-core tech site Tom's Hardware.

During that time, I've built and torn down enough desktop PCs to equip a city block's worth of internet cafes. Under race conditions, I've built PCs from bare-board to bootup in under 5 minutes. I never met a screwdriver I didn't like.

I was also a copy chief and a fact checker early in my career. (Editing and polishing technical content to make it palatable for consumer audiences is my forte.) I also worked as an editor of scholarly science books, and as an editor of "Dummies"-style computer guidebooks for Brady Books (now, BradyGames). I'm a lifetime New Yorker, a graduate of New York University's journalism program, and a member of Phi Beta Kappa.

The Technology I Use

I use a lot of computers on rotation in my daily work, but I rely on just a few to get things done. I split my work life mostly between a Microsoft Surface Laptop 3 (a 15-inch Ryzen model), paired with a Lenovo ThinkVision portable monitor, and a custom-built big-chassis Windows 10 desktop PC that has served me well for years now. (Specs: Liquid-cooled Intel Core i7-6950X Extreme Edition, 32GB of RAM, and a GeForce GTX 1080 card.) That's all in a giant chassis with six hard drives and SSDs packing its bays. (As I upgrade systems, I just keep moving the old warhorse drives over.) This behemoth is hooked up to a 32-inch LG monitor.

I also have a bunch of PCs around the house, all custom builds: another one attached to my main TV (for gaming and occasional forays into VR), a mini-PC on the bedroom TV (acting as a media server), and a Mini-ITX desktop in a corner of the living room...just because. I carry around an oversize OnePlus phone, but when I do long-haul travel, a vintage iPod Touch comes along, too, for old times' sake.

I wasn't always a PC guy. I cut my teeth on a cassette-drive-equipped Commodore VIC-20 in the 1980s. But I got serious with Apple desktops in the early 1990s, starting with a Macintosh SE, then a Macintosh LC, and finally one of the short-lived Umax "clone" Macs, before building my first PC and never looking back.

With all my typing and editing work over the years, I've become a huge proponent of thumb trackballs, which minimize wrist action (and my wrist pain). I have a secret cache of the long-discontinued Microsoft Trackball Optical Mouse (my personal favorite), held in an undisclosed location.

Read full bio