Samsung’s 30-hour claim is fantasy—but Panther Lake battery life is still wild
Samsung says its Galaxy Book6 Ultra gets “up to 30 hours” of battery life thanks to Intel’s Panther Lake hardware. But that’s a pretty bold claim.
Laptop battery life is slippery, after all. Promises from manufacturers that push above 24 hours of battery life are becoming increasingly untethered from real-world computer usage. If you were to use the Galaxy Book6 Ultra, you’d reach nowhere near that.
I tested it out myself and it didn’t get all the way there. But I’m still impressed by Core Ultra Series 3 hardware! Despite falling short of the claim, this laptop has amazing battery life for this level of performance and an Nvidia RTX GPU. Here’s why that’s exciting.
No, you’re not getting 30 hours
I ran PCWorld’s standard laptop battery life rundown test on Samsung’s Galaxy Book6 Ultra with an Intel Core Ultra 7 356H. I put the laptop into airplane mode, set the screen to around 250 nits of brightness, plug in some earbuds, and play a 4K copy of Tears of Steel on loop. Then, I see how long it runs before the laptop suspends itself. I run this at least twice to ensure the results are consistent.
On average, the Galaxy Book6 Ultra lasted 1,543 minutes (about 25.7 hours). That’s darn impressive, especially for a high-performance x86 machine with Nvidia RTX graphics hardware. But it’s also nowhere near the stated “up to 30 hours” of battery life.
A lot of factors can affect a laptop’s battery life, but the chart below shows representative examples across Intel Meteor Lake, Arrow Lake, Lunar Lake, and Panther Lake laptops. (This one’s battery life actually exceeds Qualcomm’s original Snapdragon X hardware!)
Chris Hoffman / Foundry
Compared to other laptop CPUs, it’s a big leap. This Panther Lake laptop runs cool and quiet, sipping power when you’re just on the desktop. It’s like Lunar Lake before it, except with stronger performance and better power efficiency, all on the traditional x86 platform for maximum software compatibility. It’s great! But is it 30 hours? No.
Our battery life rundown test gives us a good way to compare battery life between laptops. One that comes in at 25 hours won’t get you 25 hours of real-world use, but it’ll certainly last much longer than one that comes in at 14 hours. That’s how these battery life benchmarks should be used: as a comparison between machines. That’s all.
Psst. If you want to see which laptops blew away the competition, see our roundup of the laptops we tested with longest battery life.
What to expect with real-world usage
Laptop battery life benchmarks are becoming increasingly untethered from real-world computer usage. In real life, no one is getting anywhere near 30 hours of usage yet.
But how much under 30 hours will you personally get? Well, that depends on your workflow, the apps you use, and how high you set your screen brightness. A laptop that benchmarks at 24 to 30 hours may have more like 9 to 15 hours of actual battery life. It varies a lot depending on how you actually use your computer.
You can see this in action on any Windows PC. Just mouse over the battery icon on the Windows taskbar, which gives you an “estimated time remaining” based on usage. This estimate fluctuates:
Chris Hoffman / Foundry
That’s why the Samsung Galaxy Book6 Ultra’s real-world numbers are still impressive to me. With a laptop like this, I don’t experience “battery life anxiety.” It’s a full workday—and then some—away from an outlet. That’s a huge difference from most Intel-powered laptops I’ve used. It’s great only plugging in to charge once per day! And we’re of the opinion that long-battery-life laptops can save you serious cash.
Battery life anxiety is even less relevant now that PC manufacturers have sped up charging. Samsung promises “super-fast charging” on the Galaxy Book6 Ultra, restoring up to 63% of battery life in 30 minutes of charging. This laptop definitely charged very quickly.
So, don’t expect 30 hours, but expect good results nonetheless. If you want to get anywhere close to Samsung’s 30-hour figure, you’d have to set Windows 11’s power plan to “Best Power Efficiency” instead of “Balanced,” effectively trading performance for battery life. You’ll also have to reduce the laptop’s screen brightness as much as possible, and you’ll have to avoid doing anything besides watching a local video file on loop. (Of course, that’s not how people use PCs!)
Panther Lake is still impressive
Forget the 30 hours of battery life claim. Panther Lake is a huge upgrade even if you ignore all of that. Again, Intel’s previous Lunar Lake also delivered impressive battery life, but it had to run underpowered with poor multi-threaded CPU performance to make it happen. Meanwhile, Arrow Lake had serious power but it wasn’t power-efficient—it ran hotter and drained batteries faster.
Chris Hoffman / Foundry
With Core Ultra Series 3, Intel serves up the best of both worlds—and it’s a traditional x86 chip, so you don’t even have to switch to Arm (which comes with its own problems). I’m impressed with how well Qualcomm Snapdragon X chips work, but software compatibility is still lacking, especially with older hardware drivers and PC games.
The Samsung Galaxy Book6 Ultra is a serious laptop with an Nvidia GPU and still manages to score over 25 hours of battery life in our laptop rundown test. That’s exciting! And it’s something that deserves the hype.
Keep your expectations in check
Panther Lake delivers. While the Samsung Galaxy Book6 Ultra and its Core Ultra 7 356H didn’t last 30 hours in my testing, I did get most of the way to 26 hours. That’s incredible for a powerful PC. But, again, you won’t get 26 hours in the real world either. Real-world usage is not the same as a sterile test environment.
Here’s what you can expect from the Samsung Galaxy Book6 Ultra and other laptops like it: comfortable all-day battery life, plus the ability to recharge it very quickly, without sacrificing key performance. That right there is reason to be excited about Panther Lake.
Further reading: I tested Panther Lake. You’re gonna want it