
The Surface Laptop Studio 2 could be the last of its kind; according to Tom Warren’s latest theories. Yesterday, The Verge’s senior editor envisioned a streamlined future lineup of Microsoft’s portable PC devices. According to inside track information, the tech giant is expected to announce the end-of-life (EOL) status for this relatively young branch of Surface products (debuted back in 2021). The Surface Laptop Studio 2 is advertised as being “a laptop like no other”—courtesy of a unique/versatile setup that features a “dynamic woven hinge.” Three hybrid configurations are officially outlined as: “laptop mode for productivity, stage mode for streaming, and studio mode for creativity.” Current generation models are powered by Intel’s 13th Gen Core i7-13700H processor (aka the “Evo” platform), and can be configured with discrete NVIDIA mobile graphics solutions (GeForce RTX 4060, RTX 4050, or RTX 2000 Ada Generation). Under normal circumstances, a baseline build—reliant on an iGPU—starts at about $2400.
At the time of writing, Microsoft has not acknowledged The Verge’s insider report. So far, resellers have shared top secret info—indicating an upcoming official announcement; possibly due by next month. Another group of unnamed sources claim that Surface Laptop Studio 2 manufacturing activities have already ended, as of early May (2025). The megacorporation has culled other Surface products in the past; sometimes coinciding with the departure of key executive team members and mass layoffs. A few days ago, mainstream news outlets covered Microsoft’s latest batch of staff reductions—affecting roughly 6000 workers. Warren’s article dashes all hopes of a potential third-gen design: “there doesn’t appear to be a Surface Laptop Studio 3 on the horizon.”