I can do that at 48 samples with my Fireface UCX. But I don't usually need to run in sync with other hardware or something and for live playing of softsynths 128 samples is just fine.
No, big budget commercial studios don't use laptops but
1. They don't need to be mobile because people come to them and
2. The discussion here seems to focus a lot on the role of "engineer" (whether it's in a big budget studio or doing mobile recording, bringing the recordings back to a big studio)
There is more in the world than home studio or big budget commercial studio. I'm a professional. I produce a lot. On many locations. And unless it's a live gig or rehearsal I'm recording, it's always been the case that I do some editing (a quick Melodyne?) or mixing (can we get an mp3 of what we did today etc) so it is really useful to have powerful laptop rather than something that just records. And when your laptop is powerful enough, there is simply no need to have a powerful desktop too. Yes, desktops "max out" at way higher specs. But I didn't even need to go for the overclockable K version of my i7 6700 - I simply don't max it out. I don't do extreme productions like orchestral movie scores but as a keyboard player I use lots of softsynths and I don't like to freeze any of them generally. I have a ton of 3rd party plugins that I use liberally. I believe my needs are probably above average, if not at the top of the spectrum. For that kind of use, a good laptop can absolutely function well as primary DAW, and doing so comes with perks as well as drawbacks.