These are the gaming laptops with the best 3D performance over the past year.
Gaming on a laptop is no longer the frustrating compromise as it once was due to hardware limitation in small form factor and performance bottleneck due to overheating of components. Slimmer designs paired with more powerful processors and graphics cards have brought gaming laptops closer than ever to performance previously found only in desktops.
And the pace of innovation hasn't slowed down. Just in the past year, thanks to Nvidia GTX lineup have enabled laptops to now easily support high-end virtual reality headsets like the Oculus Rift and HTC Vive, and new designs can fit top-tier graphics hardware into very slim laptop bodies, as in the case of the 17mm thick Asus Zephyrus, which is the thinnest laptop with an Nvidia GeForce 1080 GPU. With AMD bringing in Vega lineup we would hope to see more intense competition between the Red and Green team with some pricing drops making these hardware much more affordable.
Putting gaming laptops to the test
For this roundup, we've taken all the laptops with discrete graphics hardware collected the test scores over the past 12 months, and ranked them based on 3D performance. When testing a gaming laptop or desktop, it was run preset tests using several games, including Deus Ex: Mankind Divided, Bioshock Infinite, and others, along with standard benchmarks like 3DMark, which is designed to test a computer's 3D graphic rendering capabilities.
For this list, we're ranking the laptops in order of 3DMark scores, but the real-world game scores (presented as the number of frames of animation per second the laptop can render) match very closely. Note that these scores are specifically for the exact configurations of each laptop we tested, and almost all can be configured with a wide range of options.
The winners are...
The results offer few surprises. The handful of laptops with dual video cards (rare in a laptop) came out on top, followed by laptops with a single Nvidia 1080 GPU and so on down the list. The No. 1 spot is held by the most expensive laptop we've ever reviewed, the $9,000 Acer Predator 21 X. But at more reasonable prices, systems from Asus, Alienware, Origin PC, Lenovo, HP, MSI and Razer, among others, are all represented.
As we test many more everyday laptops than gaming ones, the last few spots get us into crossover territory, with Nvidia and AMD GPUs that aren't really for gaming, so serious gamers should stick with something that has at least an Nvidia 1050 graphics card.
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