High Performance Gaming Laptops On A Budget? 106
Cory Tunney writes "In my quest to find a gaming laptop that will fulfill my gaming fantasies, but not kick me in the wallet at the same time, I've come across many options. Alienware is out of the question, as are companies like VooDooPC, but out of the rough comes companies less known but with impressive hardware. Sager seems to have won over a pretty large group of fans, and iBuyPower also seems to put out a decent amount of bang for the buck. However, when it comes down to it, I am still left with several options and I do not know what road to travel. So here's the jist of it - a system with a price tag around $2,000, a high-end video card (Radeon or the equivalent NVidia) and a system with an AMD would be a plus, but I will not rule out Intel if they can offer similar performance. So, Slashdot readers, what systems can you recommend?"
PowerBook Gaming (Score:2)
Re:PowerBook Gaming (Score:1, Informative)
Re:PowerBook Gaming (Score:2, Informative)
That said, Macs seem to be substantially faster MHz for MHz. I've owned several OS X machines and recommend them without hesitation to anybody who doesn't want specific software not available.
Have you tried going to CompUSA to play with one? They tend to have a popular game or two.
I've only seen one or tw
Re:PowerBook Gaming (Score:2)
Thanks for the info.
Re:PowerBook Gaming (Score:1)
Troll troll troll. What a load of shite.
My 15" PB averages 45-50C at worst when "just using Safari". Only when the CPU is at 100% constantly for 1hr+ does it get noticably hot. That's why the fan comes on and cools it down (never above 60C if I remember correctly).
Re:PowerBook Gaming (Score:1)
I downloaded the Ureal Tournament 2003 demo just to see if my 12" iBook (G3 900/384 mb/ATI Moblity Radeon 7500 32mb) would choke...and I was shocked to find it runs quite nicely and looks great.
(not affliated with any of the above companies, just like to game on iBook)
powerbook G4 (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:Build your own... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Build your own... (Score:1, Troll)
Knowing what you're talking about can be hard, I know, but if you don't want to make an ass out of yourself in the future, do try to do a little research before you take a shot at someone.
Uhhhhhhhhh, I apologize for the incoming comment.. (Score:2)
Seriously, get an 8600 with whatever the best graphics card they offer now happens to be. You can find coupons at get a 1.6 or 1.7 centrino at a pretty decent price. You will be more than happy. It runs Farcry better than my desktop (which is a p4-2.8ghz with a gig of ram). And their warranty is just icing.
Re:Uhhhhhhhhh, I apologize for the incoming commen (Score:2)
You missed the 9100 (Score:2)
Re:Uhhhhhhhhh, I apologize for the incoming commen (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Uhhhhhhhhh, I apologize for the incoming commen (Score:1)
Hmm... (Score:5, Funny)
A desktop computer and a midget to carry it around?
Re:Hmm... (Score:1)
Re:Hmm... (Score:1)
Re:Hmm... (Score:3, Funny)
Dunno if this counts (Score:3, Informative)
The specs I got were as follows:
- 2.8 GHz Pentium 4 HT
- 15" SXGA+ LCD
- 512 MB RAM
- 60 GB HD
- 64 MB nVidia GeForce FX Go5200
Adding a more powerful battery and a 4x DVD burner put me up to CDN $2200 after tax and shipping.
The 5150 on the US website starts at 256 megs of ram, 3.06 GHz P4, 15" XGA at $1079 after a 10% discount.
Another Dell option is $2319 USD after 15% off (about $400 savings) for the Inspiron XPS - a little more than your target price, but the specs are impressive to say the least.
I don't know how well my system is going to handle games - they're mostly a secondary priority, and the system is going to have enough power to run FFXI at least, so that's all I'm really concerned about - but as far as a mixture of cheap and effective (assuming you're not going to want to play Doom 3 on it), Dell is probably the best way to go.
Re:Dunno if this counts (Score:4, Informative)
I enjoy using it, but I would not recommend it for a hardcore gaming system. The go5200 is essentially a "value" chip, and performs worse than the older ATI Radeon Mobility 9000 (although it has DX9 support). What they don't tell you is that the chip is 50% underclocked and hardcoded that way. Look on rojakpot.com for a review.
And for you VH fans... (Score:1)
Rock on!
Of course it counts. (Score:3, Informative)
9 times out of 10 this is the best deal on desktops and laptops anywhere, especially when you consider the quality of what you're getting (I'm sorry, but Dell is better than most of these fly-by-nite operations by a long shot). The inventory changes almost daily, so if they don't have what you want, try again the next day.
That being said, I *have* had a Dell refurbished part fail on me, four months after purchase. Of course I thought "well, you can't get something for nothin
Re:Dunno if this counts (Score:2)
Re:Dunno if this counts (Score:2)
It was absolutely ridiculous. It must be basically
Honestly... (Score:2, Insightful)
Bottom line.
Re:Honestly... (Score:1)
Re:Honestly... (Score:2)
Re:Honestly... (Score:3, Informative)
15.4 1280x800 widescreen
Mobile Athlon 64 3400+ 1MB cache (or so it says - it also says 2GHz, not 2.2)
512MB PC2700 (so that's where you skimp)
80GB HDD
DVD+/-RW
6-in-1 flash card reader
ATI Mobility Radeon 9600 w/64MB VRAM
$1599 after rebate
Drop the 3400+ and go down to a 3200+, and drop the DVD burner and go down to a CD-RW/DVD combo, and it's $1399 after rebate. And, remember that the 3000+ (although that is a Newcastle, and the mobile 3000+ is
Don't get a laptop (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Don't get a laptop (Score:5, Insightful)
Laptops are popular for LAN gamers and I can see the appeal, but seriously, for the same kind of outlay you can buy a flat panel LCD display and a shuttle or similar small form factor PC. These small systems cost more than a full sized desktop but they will easily outperform any laptop in the same price range. They're also significantly more upgradable than a laptop, and the drivers are much better.
Re:Don't get a laptop (Score:1)
I'm glad I'm not the only one who feels this way. Can you guess what type of computer I'll purchase next?
Seriously, I nearly cried when I got outside in Far Cry, and everything started fucking up. I can't decide whether I want to install Doom 3 or just wait.
Re:Don't get a laptop (Score:2)
Re:Don't get a laptop (Score:3, Insightful)
It is if you travel a lot like I used to. You don't get as many neat effects. BFD. You're still not bringing your desktop to the hotel.
Re:Don't get a laptop (Score:2, Informative)
I'm becoming of the opinion that a laptop gaming isn't worth it. I've had an experience much like mrluisp stated; it was great when I first got it, and held up for a few months, but lacking driver updates and upgradeability, I was left out in the cold. Now that everything depends on pixel shaders and I can't upgrade the gra
Re:Don't get a laptop (Score:2)
Now I never benchmarked, and I never noticed a huge difference in framerates, but there were distinct improvements in artifa
Re:Don't get a laptop (Score:3, Informative)
Generally, the Nvidia drivers for the same model number will work with the laptop graphics cards. I've got a Toshiba with a GeForce Go 460, and I am currently using the latest GeForce 460 MX drivers with no problems. Mileage, of course, may vary. Looks like that the more recent Toshiba laptops might not have that luxury, by your example.
One of the newer feature
Re:Don't get a laptop (Score:2)
Re:Don't get a laptop (Score:2)
I have a 1.5 year old Inspiron 8200 that I'm still quite happy with. In another year, I may upgrade to another Dell. I game almost everywhere except home - I particularly like playing on wireless networks in the library and cafes - and I've had no problems. Desktop systems just take up way too much real estate, and where I
Re:Don't get a laptop (Score:2)
Yep, i've got a HP Pavilion ze4400, and the drivers are updated about every 6 months, however... the main reason they ask you to get the drivers from the OEM is becau
Re:Don't get a laptop (Score:2)
Laptop Choices (Score:1)
waste of time cause u need AC (Score:1)
ABS Mayhem notebooks (Score:3, Informative)
Re:ABS Mayhem notebooks (Score:2)
Re:ABS Mayhem notebooks (Score:2)
Re:ABS Mayhem notebooks (Score:2)
He says the battery life is terrible, something like 1.5 - 2 hours, but for him it's worth it, since he only bought it to bring to LAN parties, so there's no need for it to have a killer battery life.
Go Small Form Factor (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd say build yourself a small form factor pc. The plus side of this is that you get something that's still portable and will cost
I have a Shuttle SN41G2 (http://www.shuttle.com/) and it works wonders.
Re:Go Small Form Factor (Score:2, Interesting)
Not necessarily. Here's an idea, but I'm not sure of how well it would work.
Ditch the small form factor. Use a regular ATX case. Install carry handles on top and lightweight wheels on bottom.
Then, cut out a hole in the side of the case and mount an LCD there. I've never really seen a hack like this, but I've seen similar (Small LCD mounted in the front).
Oh well, an idea.
Re:Go Small Form Factor (Score:1)
A good reason to skip the laptop (Score:1)
powernotebooks (Score:3, Interesting)
Since You Like Sager... (Score:2, Informative)
E-Machines M6811 at Best Buy $1600 (Score:1)
AMD Mobile Athlon 64 3400+
512 MB PC2700
80GB HD
Radeon 9600 64MB
15.4" WideScreen
DVD+-RW
4 USB2.0
1 1394
Plays UT2004 Great!!
Re:Defective E-Machines (Score:1)
Problems with AMDs (Score:2)
I've got a Sony Vaio laptop with an AMD Athlon. It works fine for most games, although it freezes frequently and crashes once in awhile too, but i have no idea if that's Sony's fault, AMD's fault, or Microsoft's fault.
However, i've been trying to get Master of Magic and Master of Orion running on here for awhile. Both the Windows XP emulation mode and VDMSound report that there isn't enough expanded memory to run the program, no matter how much virtual expanded memor
Re:Problems with AMDs (Score:2)
If you are into retrogaming, you do not want an AMD chip, from what I can see. It appears that none of the XP processors will provide expanded memory under Windows XP. I believe the A64 is even worse in this regard... in 64-bit mode, a lot of the old addressing modes just go away. Windows XP 64-bit version won't run old games well at all.
You can kind of limp along with DOSBOX, but that's slow. I was hoping VMWare might
Re:Problems with AMDs (Score:3, Informative)
It also seems that other PGA132 chips (even 486DLC chips) had the same Dhrystone performance at the same clock speed, though, on this benchmark [alphatek.info] (reading graphs, don't know French).
If you need a 486, it gets trickier. Intel was probably the way to go at a certain clock
Re:Problems with AMDs (Score:2)
Powernotebooks.com (Score:2)
They sell the Sager laptops that I believe Alienware sells, but without fancy paint jobs, for a grand or so less. I've done price comparisons but don't really need a "gamer" spec laptop.
SFF computer (Score:2)
The Sager is good for things like Half-Life, but anything recent like Far Cry will kill it instantly. There's just no comparison between graphics cards for FPS. However, it plays Total Annihilation like no-one's business.
If you want a games machine, get a small form factor PC. Arstechnica has a handy buyer's guide [arstechnica.com], and the hot rod comes out to less than 2K (although w/o monitor).
An Old Maxim (Score:3, Insightful)
That, and you can't upgrade laptops easily. It's cheaper to go buy a reasonable GFX card (~$200) and then buy a new one when you need it for a game than buying $600 card to start out with. You don't have that freedom with a laptop.
Hypersonic-pc.com (Score:1)
Best Buy (Score:1)
Re:Best Buy (Score:1)
Re:Best Buy (Score:2)
Re:Best Buy (Score:1)
Re:Best Buy (Score:2)
This is a contradiction in terms (Score:1)
eMachines (Score:1)
power management works too (Score:2, Informative)
Age old paraphrase.... (Score:2)
Get a P-P-P-Powerbook! (Score:2, Funny)
Everything you're looking in a shiny red package. (Score:2, Interesting)
Operating System:
Microsoft® Windows® XP Professional
Processor:
Low-power mobile AMD Athlon(TM) 64 processor 2800+
Memory:
512MB (256/256)
Hard drive:
80GB
Optical drive:
(Slot loading)Super Multi Write Plus (DVD -RW, +RW, -RAM)
Display:
15.0" TFT SXGA+ (1400 x 1050)
Graphics:
ATI® MOBILITY(TM) RADEON(TM) 97
Re: (Score:1)
$1700? (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't know about tech support or quality (never bought from these guys), but you could configure a nominally good gaming laptop for about $1700.
Athlon64 3200+
1GB RAM (the low-latency Corsair stuff, even)
Radeon Mobility 9700
802.11g mini-PCI
XP Pro (wimp...)
$1774.00
Again, on paper this is a steal. YMMV.
Re:$1700? (Score:2)
I agree, SFF is a better route to go for "mobile gaming only" machines.
OK...
One of these [iwill.net], $499
Two of these [google.com], $250.98 x2
And so on...
Come on, be the ultimate performance whore. Take the performance hit of registered RAM. Spend the $3500-4000 for one bitchin' portable system. Just wait until the dual-cored chips; you'll have four effective processors. Don't listen to those who say SMP doesn't isn't worth it. If even the sound mixes in a different thread, even if the othe
Re:$1700? (Score:1)
Sager.... Cringe...... (Score:4, Interesting)
Not happening. (Score:3)
Pick two. You cannot have all three. This is a universal law of computing (and life in general).
Re:Not happening. (Score:1)
PC Torque (Score:4, Informative)
Ok (Score:1)
For whatever amount of money you spend on your laptop, a desktop built with the same amount of money will be roughly 1.5x - 2x as powerful, no contest.
However, you can still have a very decent gaming experience with a laptop.
First decision - Screen Size.
If you get a laptop that has a widescreen, some games will support it natively - but MOST WON'T. Either your game will be distorted, or you'll have vertical bars on the side of your game. Look for the W in front of the descripti
Re:Ok (Score:1)
Re:Sager (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Sager (Score:2)