The ZBook Fury G9 will soon launch alongside the new ZBook Studio G9.
HP today announced several new products in its Z portfolio of professional hardware, including two mobile workstations: the HP ZBook Fury G9 and HP ZBook Studio G9.

The ZBook Fury G9 is HP’s highest-end mobile workstation—“so powerful you’ll forget it’s a laptop,” as HP put it in a press briefing last week. The Fury G9 is equipped with Intel’s just-announced HX-series of “desktop-caliber” mobile processors, which have a base power of 55W and up to 16 cores.
The Fury G9 maxes out with 128GB of DDR5-4800MHz memory and can be configured with up to 4TB of PCIe Gen 4 storage. The mobile workstation can be configured with either NVIDIA RTX or AMD Radeon Pro graphics, up to the NVIDIA RTX A5500 GPU.
Somewhat strangely, the ZBook Fury G9 offers two different display size options—a 15.6-inch, 16:9 display and a 16-inch, 16:10 display. The highest resolution available is 3840×2400, which is offered with a 120Hz refresh rate. In another departure from mobile workstation norms, the Fury G9 includes an RGB-backlit keyboard, a feature normally exclusive to gaming laptops.

HP’s second new mobile workstation is the ZBook Studio G9, a 16-inch laptop with a slimmer design than the Fury G9 and slightly less performance. It can be maxed out with a 12th-Gen Intel Core i9-12900HK, which has 14 cores and a base power of 45W. It will be available with discrete graphics options including an NVIDIA RTX A5000 and GeForce RTX 3080 Ti GPU.
The Studio G9 offers up to 64GB of DDR5-4800MHz memory and up to 4TB of PCIe Gen 4 storage. It can be configured with a variety of 16:10 display options, up to a 3840×2400 resolution with a 120Hz refresh rate.

HP has not yet released pricing information for the ZBook Fury G9 or Studio G9, but both mobile workstations are expected to be available starting in June.
In addition to the two new ZBooks, HP announced two new displays, the Z24m G3 and Z24q G3, and a new dock, the HP Thunderbolt G4. HP also unveiled a new managed software stack for data scientists called Z by HP Data Science Stack Manager.