A flagship laptop deal has to survive the full spec check: chip, RAM, storage, display, seller, and final price. These two listings pass that test in different ways, which is why they’re the first pair I’d compare before chasing louder Prime Day discounts.
Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro 360
Pros
- Beautiful colorful AMOLED panel
- Slim lightweight convertible design
- Free bundled responsive stylus
- Strong AI graphics processing
- Generous versatile port layout
Cons
- Weak disappointing onboard speakers
- Stiff mushy keyboard keys
- Aggressive reflections outside doors
- Uncomfortable tablet mode ergonomics
amsung’s case starts with the screen. The Galaxy Book5 Pro 360 has a 16-inch 3K AMOLED touchscreen, a 120Hz refresh rate, S Pen support, Dolby Atmos, 16GB of RAM, and an Intel Core Ultra 7 processor. It’s down to $1,199.99, with Amazon showing a 40% discount from a $1,999.99 list price.
This is the more flexible machine of the two. You get a large Windows workspace that can fold into tent, tablet, and presentation modes without turning into a brick in your bag. That lines up with our review, where we liked the excellent OLED display, great build quality, thin design, reasonably light chassis, and long battery life for a big 2-in-1.
Performance and keyboard feel keep it from being a perfect large-screen laptop, so I’d treat it as a screen-first buy. The display, build, battery life, and convertible design are doing the heavy lifting here, and at this sale price, that’s enough to make the Samsung worth a serious look.
Microsoft Surface Laptop

Pros
- Beautiful colorful AMOLED panel
- Slim lightweight convertible design
- Free bundled responsive stylus
- Strong AI graphics processing
- Generous versatile port layout
Cons
- Weak disappointing onboard speakers
- Stiff mushy keyboard keys
- Aggressive reflections outside doors
- Uncomfortable tablet mode ergonomics
The Microsoft Surface Laptop slips under $1,000 at $984.43, down from $1,499.99, which makes it 34% off. That’s the attention-grabbing part, especially for a Surface with 16GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD.
This configuration has a 13.8-inch touchscreen and a Snapdragon X Plus 10-core processor, so it’s built more for everyday productivity than heavy creative work or serious gaming. The appeal is the normal-laptop part: a proper clamshell design, a smaller footprint than the Samsung, and the kind of keyboard, build quality, and battery-life strengths that make Surface Laptops easy to like.
Windows on Arm can still bring app compatibility quirks, depending on what you use every day. That’s the main thing I’d check before buying. For work, travel, school, and general use, though, this Surface is the more portable and straightforward pick. Samsung has the better screen and 2-in-1 flexibility, while Microsoft has the cleaner everyday laptop case under $1,000.






