I received the MagicBook 14, and it's powered by AMD's Ryzen 5 3500U processor, coupled with the built-in Radeon Vega 8 graphics card. That's not AMD's latest and greatest, as the company recently announced the Ryzen 4000 series of mobile processors, but it should still be a solid mid-range chip. It's based on the Zen+ architecture and built on AMD's 12nm process, and not the more recent 7nm. The laptop also has 8GB of RAM and 256GB of NVMe SSD storage, so it seems to fit right into the mid-range. It has some nice features, too, like a fingerprint reader built into the power button and a large trackpad with Precision drivers.
It will be available on April 7 in the UK for £549, and it will cost 599 in the rest of Europe.
It also has a fingerprint sensor built into the power button, a large trackpad with Precision drivers, and a nice design with blue chamfered edges on the lid.