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Good gaming laptop/tablet

Can anyone tell me what a good configuration (from scratch) for a gaming laptop or tablet is? I'm currently looking at Alienware, but I'd like to know what everyone else thinks. (:

 I'd also like to keep this under $1600, if possible.


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The main problem with gaming laptops is the graphics card which is usually limited compared to its desktop sibling.

Processor speed, RAM and hard drive wise you can relatively match with a laptop.

Also, consider the fact that it's harder to find good OEM laptops that you can assemble whatever you want inside of it like you do in desktops.

Your budget is a bit rough, but I know Dell has a few offerings (some has a higher price tag, but it's lower than Alienware).

For example, Dell XPS M1710, though it starts at $2,299 (I would generally check the XPS series since they marked as gaming laptops).

In general I would take the following items into account:

  • The best graphics card you can get for the laptop you are looking at. This is a big issue. Make sure you get an ATI or Nvidia ones and not the embedded cards which are quite bad at games
  • A 7200 RPM hard drive (in the desktop you can get a SATA that runs at 10000 which is quite a performance boost which currently you will never get on a laptop). 
  • 2Gb of RAM
  • At least an Intel Core 2 Duo. Do mind that due to the cache sizes on the Core 2 Duo processors for laptops they are a bit more expensive than desktops, so because of the price you might need to compromise on it.

In general, the compromise points are in the graphics card and the CPU.

If you can avoid the need for a gaming laptop, I would go with a normal machine and perhaps make sure it has one of the LAN game party cases like the ones Thermaltake makes if you still wish to carry it around. 

Posted 2007-06-07T20:07:29Z
Eran was invited by Yedda to answer this question.

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18 helpful answers

Good answer, a few things to add:


There is an external graphics card case extension available. It connects to an ExpressCard slot and takes pretty much any standard PCIe graphics card, which allows for a semi-portable solution (requires external power, so not suitable if you're on batteries). The performance of this is still no match for a desktop solution, because the ExpressCard is limited to one lane (PCIe x1).


Forget tablets - there are none available (as of a few weeks ago, when I did some research on that subject) that are anywhere near the graphics card power you'd want for gaming.


Hard drives with 10'000 or even 15'000 rpm are available in 2.5", but those are intended for rackmount servers -- laptops cannot provide the cooling required for these small monsters.

Posted 2007-06-11T10:00:51Z
sdfjkl was invited by Yedda to answer this question.

 

i just got a laptop for christmas the prcessors fine HDD's fine and i have 3GB of DDR2. the only problem i s the graphics.

Where do i find the graphics card that connects to the express card slot?

 
207 helpful answers

They're coming to take me away, Ha-haaa!

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In most laptops, the graphics card is embedded inside the laptop's motherboard so you won't be able to see it unless you open up your whole laptop (as opposed to the special places for RAM and hard drive that are easier to access).

If you want to be sure what type of graphics card you have I suggest you simply check it in your operating system.

 

Posted 2008-12-28T06:20:47Z
Eran was invited by Yedda to answer this question.

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