CES 2019 is chock-full of weird hardware, but the ASUS ROG Mothership GZ700 is definitely takes the cake as one of the craziest gaming laptops available.

Name ROG Mothership GZ700
Processor Intel® Core™ i9-8950HK
Operating system Windows 10 Home
Windows 10 Pro (ASUS recommends Windows 10 Pro)
Display 17.3” FHD (1920×1080) IPS-level panel, 144Hz, 3ms, 100% sRGB, Optimus, G-SYNC™
Graphics NVIDIA® GeForce RTX™ 2080 8GB GDDR6 VRAM
Memory DDR4 2666MHz SDRAM up to 64GB
Storage 3 x M.2 NVMe PCIe 3.0 x4 512GB SSD
Wireless Intel® Wi-Fi 6 AX200, 2×2 802.11ax Wi-Fi
Bluetooth® 5.0 (Version may vary as the OS upgrades)
Connectivity 1 x USB3.1 Gen2 (Type-C) / Thunderbolt 3
1 x USB3.1 Gen2 (TypeC) / VirtualLink
3 x USB3.1 Gen2 (Type-A)
1 x USB3.1 Gen1 (Type A) / USB charger +
1 x HDMI 2.0
1 x 3.5mm headphone and microphone combo jack
1 x 3.5mm microphone jack
1 x RJ-45 jack
1 x SD card reader
1 x Kensington lock
Keyboard Detachable with wired or wireless modes
Per-key Aura Sync RGB backlighting (Aura Sync wired only)
2.5mm travel distance
N-key rollover
Audio 4 x 4W speakers with Smart Amp technology
Array microphone
AC adapter 2 x 280W power adapter
Dimensions 410 (W) x 320 (D) x 29.9 (H) mm
Weight 4.7kg (estimated)

The Mothership GZ 700 should be addressed as a convertible rather than a laptop. The secret ingredient is its magnetically attached keyboard. When detached, the top portion folds can be folded under the keys, freeing up precious desk space. The right-aligned touchpad also doubles as a touch-sensitive numpad, complete with a visible grid.

Removing the Mothership’s keyboard doesn’t render it a tablet. Sure its 17″ 144Hz 1,080p IPS display goads at your index finger, and the stepless kickstand adds to the illusion, but it actually lacks a touchscreen. That’s sure to draw some disappointed frowns.

There’s little to frown over the hardware, however, as the Mothership touts the Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080 GPU and the Intel Core i9-8950HK CPU cooled by two 12V fans. It supports up to 64Gb of DDR4 RAM and triple 512GB NVMe SSDs.

To realize this beast, ASUS had to retool the internal components so that everything can actually fit. The motherboard, for example, is in a “U” shape rather than the traditional square.

Packing the Mothership could prove challenging as all the hot hardware come at the cost of bulk. The Mothership is 29.9mm thick and weighs 4.7 kg. With that said, it’s still commendable that a single-unit performance gaming PC can be squeezed into a form factor this small.

ASUS hasn’t announced how much it’s going to be yet, only that it promises a Q2 delivery date. Considering its novelty and performance, don’t hold your breath for an affordable price tag. Those interested can check out the full press release here.