sorry dont need ether
http://rog.asus.com/notebook/17-inch/g75vw/
the art of diplomacy is saying nice doggie,
until you find a big rock
Good luck gaming with that onboard graphics. The Intel HD3000 is very good as far as onboard graphics are concerned, but it's still nowhere near as good as even a low end dedicated GPU. It's your call really, but you'll be bitterly disappointed in the performance. Either be prepared to sink a minimum of $3k on a laptop, or $1.5k on a desktop, or keep saving until you can afford to do so. It might pay to watch some Youtube video recordings of games that you intend to play on the various laptops you're looking at. This should give you some idea about what each one is capable of.
I have an Asus N53SV.
i7 2.2ghz quad core,
8gb ram,
750GB HDD, (gotta get me a SSD)
Nvidia GT540M 2gb graphics.
also has intel onboard graphics, it switches between the two depending on what your doing.
Cost me around $1000 NZD (Bought it when I was in ozzy in Feb, so I got the tax back =] ).
It plays games reasonably well. Good for during my breaks between classes at uni. Been playing Borderlands 2, played Mass Effect 3 pretty well, CS:Source runs good. Gaming preformance decreases significantly if its running on battery, so needs to be plugged in.
If your looking for something to do some light gaming on the go, something like this should do it. But as others have said desktop is the only way to go for real gaming. Playing on the laptop gets it quite hot.
So look for i5 / i7, 8gb ram, dedicated graphics GT540M, GT640M etc or above. Not sure what the decent ATI cards in laptop are atm..
is <3 supposed to be a heart or an ass hat?
well fuck me dead ... just ran my 400$ cell phone over in a 16 tonne digger after it fell out of my pocket without me noticing....![]()
not this time unfortunately haha
If gaming is your strict task, you want to go AMD Llano (or wait for Trinity) with a crappy discrete GPU, you'll pick them up for very little compared to something with an Intel chip because the CPUs produce more heat, use more power and aren't nearly as powerful.
Not all bad, though, because the IGPs on them are far greater than the Intel IGP and can hybrid crossfire (think they call it Dual Graphics now) with a low end discrete GPU to pump out some decent notebook GPU performance (nowhere near the high end mobile GPUs, but the highest in your price range), and the games will bottleneck on the GPU far before they do on the CPU.
This page is what you want to be looking at, it advises which chips have IGPs that combine with which discrete GPUs to get which relative GPU performance.
http://www.amd.com/us/products/techn...aphics.aspx#/2
Then find the highest you can in your price range.
According to Pricespy, this looks to be your best option:
http://pricespy.co.nz/category.php?l...moms#prodlista
http://www.dicksmith.co.nz/product/X...003ax-notebook
haha yeah think i'll keep it in the right pocket or chest pocket from now on...
This site: laptopbattery.co.nz could be useful if you are shopping for a laptop on a budget.
Have a good look around, there are some good bargains to be had.
I got (for the wife) a brand new (end of last years stock but never opened) Lenovo 15 inch, 2.6 i7, 4GB RAM, 1TB HDD, etc for $950
Not necessarily a "gaming laptop" as such (if there is such a thing) but I'm sure you could find something you may be after.
Powerful laptops have such shitty battery life you may as well have a desktop and not lose on price and performance.
i ended up getting a toshiba, works incredibly well.
doesn't lag for games like DayZ, Payday etc.
only wanted a laptop cause my rooms to small for a desktop, and can use it on the bed
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