Recommend a powerful laptop?

Gu
12

My old laptop is very old. I'm looking for a laptop with which you can work well but also gamble. The price doesn't matter.

mo

Well, a Dell Precision in its maximum configuration.

Gu

Thank you very much.

Ca

Medion ERAZER® X17805
https://www.medion.com/at/shop/p/high-end-gaming-notebooks-erazer-x17805-intel-core-i9-9980hk-windows-10-home-43-9-cm-17-3-fhd-display-mit-144-hz-rtx-2070-max-q-1-tb-ssd-2-tb-hdd-32-gb-ram-high-end-gaming-notebook-30028054A1

ju

You can work with all common mid-range notebooks starting at around 400 euro, unless you have video editing or professional image editing in mind.

Theoretically, that would work with a so-called "gaming laptop", but you must always keep in mind that laptops are primarily designed for mobility and energy saving with battery operation.

Therefore, you can't use them to perform high-performance applications such as gaming at a high level, because they lack the necessary cooling technology, which you can install in real gaming pcs (and also in normal ones). Where should you e.g. Place a cooling element with a volume of 20-50 cm³ in a 10 mm high ultrabook?

if in such a gaming pc alone the graphics card approx. 150-200 watt power swallows, a notebook power supply can give just 100-120 watt power for the whole computer (to say nothing of the battery power), then you also know why the relevant components in notebooks are all with an M. (for mobile) are provided. These are quasi the castrated editions of the wholesome ones that are built into pcs.

if you want to play simple, older games (approx. 5-10 years old) on the lappi without great demands on fps and detailed attention, this works relatively well. But that also eats power and brings the part to sauna temperature.

Ro

The price will probably not matter to you, because otherwise we can quickly get into higher regions of 4-digit prices with clearly> 1 in the first place of the price for a "DTR" (desktop replacement).

Therefore, you should first of all give us important framework data on weight, dimensions, mobility, battery life and "what exactly gamble" in addition to the price range.

If you are really ready to go a little further into 4-digit price ranges, then I may recommend configurable models from Schenker with exchange- and maintenance-friendly modular technology designed on the housing side alone.

Which notebook do you currently have so that we can get a rough idea of your needs, and at which corners / functions / properties does it bother you specifically?

ky

Here is a laptop for work: https://shopanera.com/laptop/15-zoll-notebook/9703/hp-15-cw12-notebook-39-6-cm/15-6-zoll-amd-ryzen-3-512-gb-ssd

For gaming I would rather put together a PC myself. This makes you even cheaper overall than just with a gaming laptop and you have something more powerful. I recommend the following components:

Processor: AMD Ryzen 5 2600 boxed with cooler
Mainboard: ASRock B450M Pro4
RAM: 16GB G.Skill Aegis 3000Mhz
Graphics card: AMD Radeon RX 5700 Custom (8GB GDDR6)
SSD: 1000GB Samsung 860 QVO 2.5 "(6.4cm) SATA 6Gb / s 3D-NAND QLC (MZ-76Q1T0BW)
Power supply: 400W Bequiet Pure Power 11
Housing: Sharkoon V1000 / S1000 (Window)

To do this, go to Mindfactory and order the individual components there. Then you have to assemble the PC yourself.

Here you can get Windows 10 cheap for your own compiled PC: https://hardwarerat.de/...-64bit-key This is only the product key. You must first download the Media Creation Tool from the Microsoft website and use it to create a Windows 10 USB boot stick. Then install Windows 10 on the PC you have put together and activate it with the purchased Windows 10 product key. The activation will then be saved permanently in your Microsoft account. If you have to reinstall, just log in again with your Microsoft account. Windows 10 will then be reactivated. You no longer have to enter the product key. That is so cheap is because it is an OEM version. OEM versions are full versions which e.g. With a computer. A court ruling in 2000 ruled that OEM versions can also be bought and sold separately.

Gu

My old laptop is an Asus K50IN that has been running for a long time. That is why it is extremely slow, has some quirks with the battery and sometimes it does not work at all. For my work I need a laptop because I have to work with it a lot. Unfortunately, this is hardly possible with my current laptop. But I also play a few games, that should be "my" new laptop.

Ro

The Asus K50IN was priced around 600 euro and should actually have been around 9 years old.

Does the size of 15.6 "still fit, and what games would you primarily be interested in besides your work use for a new book?

The price doesn't matter

As I said, with "up to" higher than 4 digits, the Preus may be But do not really matter in relation to your intended uses.

Even for pure "worksheet" as a premise, you would also get a book (15.6 ") for around 600 euro new price, which would be X faster than your book at the time.

In this rough price range, I would already have something in mind with an AMD Ryzen 3 - 2300u / 3300u or Ryzen 5 - 2500u / 3500u (so far regardless of your possible games) for recommendation.

Here in advance to your "gaming question" what could be possible with an AMD Ryzen 3 - 2300U / 3300u including Vega6 graphics unit:

https://www.notebookcheck.com/...644.0.html

(Your worksheet has not yet been taken into account, since it is probably not particularly important for the performance of the graphics solution there)

(Simply scroll down for the game benches in the link)

Gu

The size of the laptop would really not matter. "Price does not matter" was a bit stupid, the price should not exceed 2000 euro. The games would be something like Minecraft and all shooter games.

Ro

To stay close to the middle of your budget, I recommend something from Schenker's XMG Core 17 series (17 "notebook) with a Geforce GTX 1650 to GTX 1660 depending on your taste, whereby I use a GTX 1650 - 4096 MiB even with one 17 "- Book in 1080p resolution for occasional gaming as the better solution.

Many 15-inchers already have temperature problems with a GTX 1650 including modern Intel Quadcore under load even at room temperatures around 20 degrees.

AMD is unfortunately not quite at this level in the area of "gaming books" with CPU + GPU from a single source. (is not about possible performance, but especially for the graphics chip about rendering efficiency per watt… Important issue for notebooks in this performance class with powerful graphics)

The AMD - Ryzen are very good on the CPU side, but AMD is not as far as necessary compared to NVidia in terms of graphics. (Cover for gaming on notebooks)

Gu

Ok thank you very much, that helped me a lot.

Ro

My pleasure. ☺