The MacBook Neo is moonlighting as a Windows gaming machine, and it’s doing it well
Apple's MacBook Neo, a budget laptop running a mobile A18 Pro chip with just 8GB of RAM, has passed a Windows 11 gaming test via Parallels Desktop, delivering playable frame rates in several titles.
With Parallels Desktop and 5GB of allocated RAM, the MacBook Neo pulled off Windows gaming results that its budget positioning had no right to promise
Apple
Apple didn’t position its most affordable MacBook as a gaming machine. The MacBook Neo, a budget-leaning laptop that runs on Apple’s A18 Pro chip, the same chip that powers the iPhone 16 Pro models, has been put through a Windows 11 gaming test for YouTuber ETA Prime.
Turns out, the results are genuinely surprising. Using Parallels Desktop, a virtualization app (paid) with 3D hardware acceleration, the channel ran Windows 11 ARM directly on the Neo’s 8GB RAM (allocating 5GB to the virtual environment), and it did better than most people would think it would.
What games actually ran well?
Dirt 3 held 75 fps at 1200p on high settings, while Portal 2 cleared 100 fps on medium settings. Skyrim, on the other hand, maintained roughly 60 fps at 1200p resolution on medium graphics settings, while Marvel Cosmic Invasion averaged around 60 fps at the maximum resolution.
What helped performance was games running as native Windows-on-ARM applications. However, GTA V was among the notable stumbles, as the frame rates through the Parelles weren’t playable at all. However, according to Notebookcheck, the game runs acceptably via Crossover.
MacBook Neo Apple
Why does this matter for everyday MacBook Neo users?
For users who work on their Mac but occasionally enjoy playing Windows-only games, MacBook Neo’s ability to run native titles via the Parallels app comes as good news. The cost? Parallels Desktop’s Standard tier costs $99.99 per year, which could add to your weekend leisure sessions.
Anyways, the bigger takeaway is that the MacBook Neo, even with 8GB of RAM (highlighted as a constraint in the video), can run low-to-mid-range Windows games. It also changes the notion around budget Apple hardware being primarily for productivity-based tasks.
As virtualization tech continues to improve and Apple provides more RAM in future generations of the MacBook Neo, it could redefine what “budget” actually means for Apple buyers, bridging the gap between MacBook and Windows laptops even further.

For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
The smart home was supposed to be open, but it’s becoming a toll booth
Behind the language of seamless convenience is a quieter power grab over discovery, access, and control inside the connected home.
I grew up thinking that paying for a product meant getting the product. A laptop came with its features. A car came with its hardware. A printer was still a menace, but at least it was a one-time menace.
I noticed the shift when my subscriptions stopped being mostly media and started attaching themselves to physical things. It was one thing to pay every month for movies, music, or cloud storage. It was another to watch the same logic spread into gadgets, cars, fitness gear, and smart home devices that already came with a price tag.
I like what Framework is promising, but it needs to deliver
Your next laptop might be easier to upgrade and repair

Modular PC maker Framework Computer has officially announced its upcoming “Next Gen” event, scheduled to take place on April 21. The company is expected to unveil its latest generation of hardware, continuing its focus on upgradeable, user-controlled computing systems.
The event will be livestreamed globally, with select attendees invited to experience the new products in person. While Framework has not revealed specific product details, teasers and industry signals suggest a strong emphasis on modular upgrades and deeper integration with open platforms like Linux.
Claude Cowork is becoming shared workplace infrastructure
Anthropic moved it out of preview and added the admin oversight needed for broader adoption.

Claude Cowork is moving beyond early testing and into a wider role at work. On April 9, Anthropic said it became generally available on all paid plans for macOS and Windows, alongside a set of enterprise features meant to support larger rollouts.
That pairing matters more than the availability update by itself. Anthropic is tying the release to role-based access controls for Enterprise, group spend limits, usage analytics, expanded OpenTelemetry support, and tighter connector permissions, all aimed at making Cowork easier to manage across an organization.
Hollif