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Gamer-approved laptop recommendation thread

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Sweet, just got my SSD in the mail from Amazon (love Amazon Prime, bought it on Monday, got it on Tuesday), and the laptop should be here today. I'll just reinstall on the SSD.

W7 is preinstalled, right?

I'm guessing no new drivers for the 7970?

I'm loving my SSD right now. I probably should have went bigger. But it serves it's purpose.

W7 is preinstalled if you it was part of your initial order.
As for the 7970. The 12.6 9.00 BETA worked great until I ran into issues with Catalyst.The beta drivers offer a nice boost over Celvo drivers, but at the cost of stability. I'd stick with the one Celvo ships for now if you want somewhat stable drivers. It may take a few tries at installing them though (black/blue screen errors).
 
this isn't really fully a gaming question... for an ultrabook is there a big performance different between the i5 and i7 that warrants ~$200 price difference?
 
Nvidia doesn't even have drivers available which include support for the higher 600M cards, so pick your poison.
this isn't really fully a gaming question... for an ultrabook is there a big performance different between the i5 and i7 that warrants ~$200 price difference?

If the i7 is a dual core, hell no.
 
Any recommendation for a regular laptop hard drive? Looking for a 7200rpm for my new Sager. 750gb-1tb preferable. Going to be the second drive, so I don't need a small SSD partition. Been a while since I got a laptop HD, what are the good brands now?
 
Man the Clevo drivers are trash. I mean yeah they're more stable. But the performance increase from beta drivers is almost night and day. I think I can live without Catalyst access for a while if the trade off is better performance.
 
I think I'm going to buy a Sony S15 and upgrade to the optional Blu-ray burner, so I can burn Blu-ray discs on my laptop. Huhuhu~

Any recommendation for a regular laptop hard drive? Looking for a 7200rpm for my new Sager. 750gb-1tb preferable. Going to be the second drive, so I don't need a small SSD partition. Been a while since I got a laptop HD, what are the good brands now?

If you get a 750GB Seagate Momentus XT, you will have a hybrid hard drive with a smallish (4GB) flash memory cache mated to the usual 7200rpm spinning platters. It's no match for a real SSD where the entire capacity is flash memory but the cache helps if you run the same programs (such as the same game) repeatedly from it regularly.
 
This thread has taught me that laptops have even worse localization than videogames sometimes. Quite a few laptops or versions of laptops with specific specs that are not available in the Netherlands through manufacturer's official sites.
 
This thread has taught me that laptops have even worse localization than videogames sometimes. Quite a few laptops or versions of laptops with specific specs that are not available in the Netherlands through manufacturer's official sites.

Which ones are you looking to find? I may be able to assist.
 
What is your guys' opinion on this? http://www.techbargains.com/news_displayItem.cfm/303488

17.3" 1600x900 LED; Intel Core i7-3610QM 2.3GHz Quad-Core Ivy Bridge; 8GB RAM; 1TB HDD; Blu-Ray reader; 802.11n; Windows 7 Home Premium; NVIDIA Geforce GT630 1GB 1GB; HD webcam; fingerprint; 6-cell battery; 2yr warranty

Would it run games like Diablo 3 alright?

With the present day's system requirements, and looking toward tomorrow, there's little logic in taking less than the GT 650M. It's nearly 3x the speed of the 630M at 900p.

The card is just a $125 upgrade on that build, and is worth every cent.
 
How safe is it to OC a laptop GPU (GT 555M in my case) with MSI Afterburner if I monitor the temps and keep them at around 80 degrees and make sure there is no artifacting? I only plan to OC when I'm playing games.
 
How safe is it to OC a laptop GPU (GT 555M in my case) with MSI Afterburner if I monitor the temps and keep them at around 80 degrees and make sure there is no artifacting? I only plan to OC when I'm playing games.

No different from OCing a desktop GPU. GT555M is Fermi so it will literally cook along if you OC it but as long as you keep an eye on it you'll be okay.
 
If anyone's looking for an SSD for their gaming laptop, right now Newegg has the Samsung 830 series 256GB SSD for $255 after the promo code.

Newegg.com - SAMSUNG 830 Series MZ-7PC256N/AM 2.5" 256GB SATA III MLC Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) Notebook Upgrade Kit
Promo code: EMCNDHH37

Is that 640M LE a Kepler?

There are 2 versions of GT 640M LE, a Fermi and a Kepler. However the one in the S15 is GK107 (Kepler).

I didn't get the Blu-ray burner, I already have one in my desktop and I don't forsee needing to burn a bunch of Blu-rays on the road.
 
So how does the new 7730m from AMD fare against modern day games with a 720p screen?

Oh and the laptop in question is the Dell Inspiron 7520

Specs:

3rd Generation Intel® Core™ i7-3612QM Processor (6MB cache, up to 3.1 GHz)
Windows® 7 Home Premium 64bit (English)
15.6" HD WLED True-Life (1366x768)
6GB2 DDR3 SDRAM at 1600MHz
1.0TB 5400RPM SATA Hard Drive
AMD Radeon™ HD 7730M DDR3 2GB
12.7" SATA Tray Load DVD+/-RW
 
How safe is it to OC a laptop GPU (GT 555M in my case) with MSI Afterburner if I monitor the temps and keep them at around 80 degrees and make sure there is no artifacting? I only plan to OC when I'm playing games.

It's totally safe. Just use HWMonitor or GPU-Z to make sure temps stay below 90C.

No different from OCing a desktop GPU. GT555M is Fermi so it will literally cook along if you OC it but as long as you keep an eye on it you'll be okay.

"Cook"? Nah that's gross overstatement. Automatically Equating the fact that it's Fermi to it running hot is a mistake. The 555M is one of the coolest cards in the 500M series.

So how does the new 7730m from AMD fare against modern day games with a 720p screen?

Oh and the laptop in question is the Dell Inspiron 7520

Specs:

3rd Generation Intel® Core™ i7-3612QM Processor (6MB cache, up to 3.1 GHz)
Windows® 7 Home Premium 64bit (English)
15.6" HD WLED True-Life (1366x768)
6GB2 DDR3 SDRAM at 1600MHz
1.0TB 5400RPM SATA Hard Drive
AMD Radeon™ HD 7730M DDR3 2GB
12.7" SATA Tray Load DVD+/-RW
Well the 7730M is a downclocked desktop 7750. It will slaughter 768p, especially if overclocked.
 
I've been looking around at laptops, thought I'd ask here for advice. For some reason it seems way harder to find information on mobile parts than desktop equivalents.

I've been wanting to build a gaming desktop for a long while now and will have the funds soon, but unfortunately I don't think it's going to work right now. I'm currently renting a small room while I finish my bachelor's, and I'm likely going to be in a similar situation for the next few years. I know building a desktop would give me way better bang for the buck and I'd be able to upgrade, but something portable is going to fit my lifestyle much better right now.

So I'm looking for a laptop with the following:

1) Needs to be decently powerful, as it'll basically be a portable desktop. This shouldn't be a problem though.

2) Needs to be a reliable brand. I've had my current laptop for six years, and while this new one probably won't be sticking around quite as long, I'm going to be using it for the next three minimum.

3) I'd like it to be somewhat gaming capable. I realize I'm not going to be maxing out games, but I would like to be able to at least play new games like Battlefield and Witcher 2 and future games that look that nice, even if at medium or low settings. I've been having a lot of trouble finding benchmarks for mobile cards, but basically I'd say as long as I can have games looking about as good as a typical 360 game but at 1080p at a steady 30fps I'll be happy.

4) This is kind of specific, and possibly stupid, but I'd really appreciate it if I could find a laptop that will let me use video out with the case closed. I have a friend who uses a small laptop for school and connects it to a monitor at home, and he has to have the laptop on his desk with the screen open when he's using the monitor, even though it's just blank black screen. I'd really like to be able to keep the laptop closed and completely out of the way if possible.

5) I realize any laptop that fits the above is going to be big and heavy, but I'd still like to go as portable as possible just in case I ever do need to take it to school or anywhere else, even though it'll be at home 90% of the time. Big and heavy isn't a dealbreaker, but between two similar models I'd prefer the lighter one. For the same reason, while a 17" wouldn't be a dealbreaker, I'd prefer a 15"

Budget is ~$1200, I could go as high as $1500 but only if it's really worth it. If the extra $300 or so would get a whole other level of performance I could do it, but it's not worth it to me if it's only going to net me like an extra 5fps in games or something like that.

Thanks in advance to anyone who answers, I realize this is a long post to read through. Since I'm going to be using this computer for quite some time I really want to make sure I spend the money wisely, and like I said, information on laptops seems to be relatively scarce compared to desktop parts.
 
I've been looking around at laptops, thought I'd ask here for advice. For some reason it seems way harder to find information on mobile parts than desktop equivalents.

I've been wanting to build a gaming desktop for a long while now and will have the funds soon, but unfortunately I don't think it's going to work right now. I'm currently renting a small room while I finish my bachelor's, and I'm likely going to be in a similar situation for the next few years. I know building a desktop would give me way better bang for the buck and I'd be able to upgrade, but something portable is going to fit my lifestyle much better right now.

So I'm looking for a laptop with the following:

1) Needs to be decently powerful, as it'll basically be a portable desktop. This shouldn't be a problem though.

2) Needs to be a reliable brand. I've had my current laptop for six years, and while this new one probably won't be sticking around quite as long, I'm going to be using it for the next three minimum.

3) I'd like it to be somewhat gaming capable. I realize I'm not going to be maxing out games, but I would like to be able to at least play new games like Battlefield and Witcher 2 and future games that look that nice, even if at medium or low settings. I've been having a lot of trouble finding benchmarks for mobile cards, but basically I'd say as long as I can have games looking about as good as a typical 360 game but at 1080p at a steady 30fps I'll be happy.

4) This is kind of specific, and possibly stupid, but I'd really appreciate it if I could find a laptop that will let me use video out with the case closed. I have a friend who uses a small laptop for school and connects it to a monitor at home, and he has to have the laptop on his desk with the screen open when he's using the monitor, even though it's just blank black screen. I'd really like to be able to keep the laptop closed and completely out of the way if possible.

5) I realize any laptop that fits the above is going to be big and heavy, but I'd still like to go as portable as possible just in case I ever do need to take it to school or anywhere else, even though it'll be at home 90% of the time. Big and heavy isn't a dealbreaker, but between two similar models I'd prefer the lighter one. For the same reason, while a 17" wouldn't be a dealbreaker, I'd prefer a 15"

Budget is ~$1200, I could go as high as $1500 but only if it's really worth it. If the extra $300 or so would get a whole other level of performance I could do it, but it's not worth it to me if it's only going to net me like an extra 5fps in games or something like that.

Thanks in advance to anyone who answers, I realize this is a long post to read through. Since I'm going to be using this computer for quite some time I really want to make sure I spend the money wisely, and like I said, information on laptops seems to be relatively scarce compared to desktop parts.

HP Envy 15 or Sony VAIO S15. The Envy has the gruntier GPU, the VAIO is thin and light. Both have the same 15.5" 1080p IPS screen.

To control the laptop's behavior when the screen is closed, change the Power Settings in Windows. Any laptop can be made to stay awake when the screen is closed.
 
I just bought that new retina macbook. It hasn't come in yet, but here are the specs iirc:

2.6ghz (3.6ghz turbo boost) i7
GeForce 650m
16gb ram. Probably DDR 3.

Will that be good enough for modern gaming? I'm not looking to play the newest games on the highest settings or anything, but it'd be nice to get a stable 60fps framerate on most new titles, and hopefully emulate dolphin with success. Thoughts?
 
>Buying a Mac for gaming

I hope you enjoy playing games at 1440x900 on your $3,000 laptop. You won't be running any games at 2880x1800 on a GT 650M in case you didn't realize this, and running at 1/4 resolution will be likely the best option to minimize ugly-ass scaling.
 
HP Envy 15 or Sony VAIO S15. The Envy has the gruntier GPU, the VAIO is thin and light. Both have the same 15.5" 1080p IPS screen.

To control the laptop's behavior when the screen is closed, change the Power Settings in Windows. Any laptop can be made to stay awake when the screen is closed.

Cool, thanks! Especially for the second bit, my friend and I screwed around with his computer for the better part of an hour once and couldn't figure out how to get it to do video out while closed, so that's good to know.

The Envy 15 looks pretty nice, a little bit like a Macbook knockoff, but still nice. It's actually quite a bit thinner than I was expecting my laptop would be. Is it's graphics card good enough to play modern games? Apparently it has a 7750m, like with many cards I'm not really finding any benchmarks by Googling it.

As a rough estimation of what I want, I'd like to be able to play recent console games like Arkham City or Skyrim on high settings, and really graphics-intensive PC games like Witcher 2 at medium or whatever, I'm assuming games like that and BF3 are near impossible to max out on a laptop, but as long as they look good I'll be happy.

I've read in the thread that the 7970m is the card to get right now, unfortunately it looks like I can't afford that.

That Vaio actually looks very nice too. How much less powerful is it gaming-wise? I've heard pretty often that Vaio's are very reliable. But if the HP is much more capable for gaming, it's already thin enough that I'd prefer it.
 
>Buying a Mac for gaming

I hope you enjoy playing games at 1440x900 on your $3,000 laptop. You won't be running any games at 2880x1800 on a GT 650M in case you didn't realize this, and running at 1/4 resolution will be likely the best option to minimize ugly-ass scaling.
Someone's terribly bitter. I'm getting this laptop essentially as a gift after I started slightly recovering from having leukemia, but I appreciate you trying to make me feel like shit.

Either way, it's not exclusively for gaming. And since I'm not particular on my PC gaming, it sounds like it'll be more than enough to satisfy me.
 
The Envy 15 looks pretty nice, a little bit like a Macbook knockoff, but still nice. It's actually quite a bit thinner than I was expecting my laptop would be. Is it's graphics card good enough to play modern games? Apparently it has a 7750m, like with many cards I'm not really finding any benchmarks by Googling it.

http://www.notebookcheck.net/AMD-Radeon-HD-7750M.72677.0.html

As a rough estimation of what I want, I'd like to be able to play recent console games like Arkham City or Skyrim on high settings, and really graphics-intensive PC games like Witcher 2 at medium or whatever, I'm assuming games like that and BF3 are near impossible to max out on a laptop, but as long as they look good I'll be happy.

Arkham City and Skyrim are designed for consoles and both the Envy 15 and VAIO S15 have no issues running it on high and no AA. The Witcher 2 and BF3 are pretty tough nuts to crack, you'll be lowering the resolution and running in medium/low on both laptops.

That Vaio actually looks very nice too. How much less powerful is it gaming-wise? I've heard pretty often that Vaio's are very reliable. But if the HP is much more capable for gaming, it's already thin enough that I'd prefer it.

For pure gaming prowess, go for the Envy. It's probably at least 50% faster in raw GPU muscle than the VAIO. Of course you'll be dealing with ATI's drivers but everything in this world has a price I'm afraid.

Someone's terribly bitter. I'm getting this laptop essentially as a gift after I started slightly recovering from having leukemia, but I appreciate you trying to make me feel like shit.

Either way, it's not exclusively for gaming. And since I'm not particular on my PC gaming, it sounds like it'll be more than enough to satisfy me.

You didn't tell me ANY of this with your initial post. If you act like a typical Apple user, people will treat you like one. I'm not able to read your mind, you know. I'm sorry I came across as being condescending to you.
 
Someone's terribly bitter. I'm getting this laptop essentially as a gift after I started slightly recovering from having leukemia, but I appreciate you trying to make me feel like shit.

Either way, it's not exclusively for gaming. And since I'm not particular on my PC gaming, it sounds like it'll be more than enough to satisfy me.

I don't think he's bitter or trying to make you feel like shit. The Retina Pro is an amazing computer, but computers a third of the price can match or beat it as far as gaming goes, especially at native res. Can't blame people for telling you how it is when you ask about your extremely expensive laptop that caters to creative professionals in a thread about gaming rigs.


For pure gaming prowess, go for the Envy. It's probably at least 50% faster in raw GPU muscle than the VAIO. Of course you'll be dealing with ATI's drivers but everything in this world has a price I'm afraid.

Wow, that's a big difference, definitely prefer the Envy in that case.

How does the Envy compare to this?

It's heavy, but more in line with what I was expecting from a gaming laptop. If it's weaker than the Envy than it's a no brainer, but if it's another situation where it's 50% more powerful I can deal with the bulk for the two or so times I have to move it per month.

If they're close in power though I would take the Envy, even if I don't move it often the size does seem nice. Also the laptop I have now that I haven't had a problem with in the years I've owned it is an HP, so I trust the brand.

Edit: Just did another search and apparently the Envy 15 is now available with a 7850m card, not a 7750m.

Second edit: Actually looks like maybe only the 17" Envy comes with the 7850m, I'm not sure how big the difference is. HP's website is a damn mess, there's a ton of different Envy laptops (Ultrabook, Sleekbook, Spectre, regular) and as far as I can tell you can't configure them, only buy them in different pre-configurations.
 
I despise OS X, and I dislike apple in general. Never had an apple computer before, and I plan on running windows on this one. Either way, this laptop wasn't purchased for gaming, I was just wondering if I'd be able to run my steam games and stuff with no problem. I was looking for an accurate assessment based on the hardware, not a criticism on the choice of computer I have.

To be fair, though, I've owned a lot of different laptops in my life, and they've almost all been garbage. My envy 17, especially, was the biggest pile of trash I've ever had. (Granted, it was one of the earlier versions and I've heard they've gotten much better). While I'm not a fan of apple, I know that most of my friends with macbooks have had them forever with little to no issues with the hardware. Nothing's worse than spending $1.5k on a new laptop, only to have it crap out six months later.

I couldn't care less what resolution I play at, or what settings. I'm just hoping it'll play what I have now at a solid framerate.
 
I despise OS X, and I dislike apple in general. Never had an apple computer before, and I plan on running windows on this one. Either way, this laptop wasn't purchased for gaming, I was just wondering if I'd be able to run my steam games and stuff with no problem. I was looking for an accurate assessment based on the hardware, not a criticism on the choice of computer I have.

To be fair, though, I've owned a lot of different laptops in my life, and they've almost all been garbage. My envy 17, especially, was the biggest pile of trash I've ever had. (Granted, it was one of the earlier versions and I've heard they've gotten much better). While I'm not a fan of apple, I know that most of my friends with macbooks have had them forever with little to no issues with the hardware. Nothing's worse than spending $1.5k on a new laptop, only to have it crap out six months later.

I couldn't care less what resolution I play at, or what settings. I'm just hoping it'll play what I have now at a solid framerate.

I don't know much about it really, but for what it's worth you can find YouTube videos of people playing stuff like Skyrim on the Retina Pro and it looks decent. It's hard to really tell what it looks like on YouTube quality but it seems like it can run recent games decently enough, especially if you don't resolution.

As yet another update to my previous post, the Envy 15 with a 7750m and Envy 17 with a 7850m are actually the same exact price once you upgrade the 15 to a 1080p display. What is the power difference between those two cards like?
 
I think I'm going to get an MSI GT70 in the coming days. My only question is, will it be worth the extra $100 to step up from the base model, with the 3 gig 670 to the model with the 2 gig 675?
 
Sager is fast. Got a shipping notice yesterday (only paced order on Tuesday). Will be here on Wednesday.

I think I'm going to buy a Sony S15 and upgrade to the optional Blu-ray burner, so I can burn Blu-ray discs on my laptop. Huhuhu~



If you get a 750GB Seagate Momentus XT, you will have a hybrid hard drive with a smallish (4GB) flash memory cache mated to the usual 7200rpm spinning platters. It's no match for a real SSD where the entire capacity is flash memory but the cache helps if you run the same programs (such as the same game) repeatedly from it regularly.

Thanks for the advice, picked one up on Amazon, and it will be here when the rest of it is.
 
Can someone give me some recommendations for mid-range graphics cards (want to run D3)?
I'm looking to spend $800-$1000 for a new laptop.

I prefer Nvidia.

i7 Cpu
decent screen/resolution (it seems I can't get an IPS for my price)

Battery life and portability don't matter.

Thanks.
 
Did I make the wrong assumption? The Sager 9170 has only one HDD bay and an optical drive bay. I thought I would have 2 HDD bays and an optical drive bay. I'm trying to think what would be the best for gaming. Probably a big HDD and a SSD?
 
Ilya looks forward to hearing your impressions! Don't forget to run 3DMark 11 on it! Ufufu~

what's that?

Did I make the wrong assumption? The Sager 9170 has only one HDD bay and an optical drive bay. I thought I would have 2 HDD bays and an optical drive bay. I'm trying to think what would be the best for gaming. Probably a big HDD and a SSD?

I think only the 6175 and 6165 have the dual bays. Some of the other ones have a swap-in/out optical bay for a second drive.
 
what's that?



I think only the 6175 and 6165 have the dual bays. Some of the other ones have a swap-in/out optical bay for a second drive.

Yet, when I go to the xoticpc site for the 9170, they specifically say it's capable. One optical drive and 2 hard drives. Maybe talking about something else? Are mSATA drives completely different? I was hoping for an optical, SSD, and regular HDD on this thing.
 
Yet, when I go to the xoticpc site for the 9170, they specifically say it's capable. One optical drive and 2 hard drives. Maybe talking about something else? Are mSATA drives completely different? I was hoping for an optical, SSD, and regular HDD on this thing.

Hmm.

http://www.sagernotebook.com/index.php?page=product_info&model_name=NP9170

Says it on their main website as well on the main product page, but it's not in the basic overview screen when you go to 17" screen products. I'd give Sager a call and double check.

Even the picture makes it look like you swap out the optical bay to use the 2nd HDD.

9170_HDD2.jpg


Unless the HDD is sitting on top of the optical bay.

The 6165/75 are much more clear with the pictures.
6175_hdd.jpg
 
>Buying a Mac for gaming

I hope you enjoy playing games at 1440x900 on your $3,000 laptop. You won't be running any games at 2880x1800 on a GT 650M in case you didn't realize this, and running at 1/4 resolution will be likely the best option to minimize ugly-ass scaling.
>Buying a laptop for gaming

For the record that computer will run games like Skyrim and Arkham City good on high settings at 1900x1200 and the scaling looks absolutely fine.
 
Yet, when I go to the xoticpc site for the 9170, they specifically say it's capable. One optical drive and 2 hard drives. Maybe talking about something else? Are mSATA drives completely different? I was hoping for an optical, SSD, and regular HDD on this thing.
Hmm.

http://www.sagernotebook.com/index.php?page=product_info&model_name=NP9170

Says it on their main website as well on the main product page, but it's not in the basic overview screen when you go to 17" screen products. I'd give Sager a call and double check.

Even the picture makes it look like you swap out the optical bay to use the 2nd HDD.

9170_HDD2.jpg


Unless the HDD is sitting on top of the optical bay.

The 6165/75 are much more clear with the pictures.
6175_hdd.jpg
I have the NP8170, which is designed the same as the 9170.

The machines do indeed have 2 HDD bays. The picture is showing that the 2nd bay is indeed under the optical drive, not either/or in place of it, and the ODD requires the removal of a single screw to slide out of the way.

I'm currently running an SSD in the main bay, an HDD in the 2nd slot, and a BR-Drive.

Hey everyone,
I'm in the market for a 13.3" - 14" laptop no more than a $850.
Now I've been thinking of getting the asus u31sg since it seems like it would fit all my needs.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B007MW16JS/?tag=neogaf0e-20
What do you guys think?

As long as your needs don't include gaming, it seems fine.
 
I have the NP8170, which is designed the same as the 9170.

The machines do indeed have 2 HDD bays. The picture is showing that the 2nd bay is indeed under the optical drive, not either/or in place of it, and the ODD requires the removal of a single screw to slide out of the way.

I'm currently running an SSD in the main bay, an HDD in the 2nd slot, and a BR-Drive.

Well there you go then. I figured a 17" screen model should certainly have the space, but the picture isn't as clear as the others.
 
So, my old laptop finally kicked the bucket, and I want to buy a new one which can run most games decently, not a beast by any means, but something that can run newer games without major issues.
The ones I've been eyeing are:
Asus N56VZ

Asus G55VW

I know next to nothing about PC gaming, but since I need a new laptop anyway, It'd be nice to play some games on it as well. The G55 is at the limit of my price range, so let me know if it's worth bothering gaming on it. If not, I'll just get a cheap laptop instead. Also, if there are better alternatives in that price range, let me know.
 
I'm using an MSI 16F2-12

I really like it. I hook it up to my home theater with the HDMI and game on the couch that way.

- i7 2630QM
- GTX570m @ 750Mhz
- 8 gigs HyperX 1866
- 120 gig OCZ Vertex 3 SSD
- 750 gig Scorpio Black
- BluRay
- Intel wireless 6300-N
- 95% Gamut Screen
- IC Diamond thermal goop

Runs BF3 and Skyrim at ultra settings at 1080p

EgH4vh.jpg


oz3Tvh.jpg
 
Has anyone tried or bought the Asus Zenbook UX32VD? I know it isn't all powerful, but it does have a GT 620m.

Intel® Core™ i7 3517U Processor
Intel® Core™ i5 3317U Processor
Full HD wide-view IPS anti-glare panel
Genuine Windows® 7 Home Premium
Stylish backlit keyboard
World’s first 13.3” ultrabook to offer discrete NVIDIA® GT 620M graphics with 1GB video RAM
Up to 500GB hard drive plus hybrid 24GB SSD to accelerate performance
Instant on 2-second resume and 10days standby with auto data
Speakers by Bang & Olufsen ICEpower®
 
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