Gaming Laptop Roundup

by Jarred Walton on August 29, 2008 5:00 AM EST

Test Setup

Below are the tested configurations for the four laptops included in this roundup. Again, keep in mind that the Gateway P-171XL and the tested configuration for the Sager and NP9262 are no longer available. The P-171XL has been replaced by the P-173XL, which has a slower processor as well as a lower price. The NP9262 is now available with Penryn-based processors, including quad-core models, and it ships with 9800M GT instead of 8800M GTX. The 9800M GT is virtually identical to the 8800M GTX, except it has a 20% higher clock GPU speed (with the same amount of memory bandwidth).

Alienware m15x Test System
Processor Core 2 Extreme X9000 (2.80GHz 6MB 800FSB)
Memory 2x2048MB Qimonda DDR2-667 5-5-5-15
Graphics NVIDIA GeForce 8800M GTX 512MB
NVIDIA drivers: 175.80 (Beta from Alienware)
Intel GMA X3100 for BinaryGFX
Display 15.4" WUXGA (1920x1200) Matte
(LG Philips LP154WU1)
Hard Drive 1x200GB Seagate Momentus 7200.2
(ST9200420ASG)
Optical Drive Matshita BD-MLT UJ-220S Blu-ray/DVD Recorder
Battery 9-Cell 56WHr
6-Cell 41WHr (Optional Smart Bay)
Operating System Windows Vista Home Premium 32-bit

Gateway P-171XL FX Test System
Processor Core 2 Extreme X7900 (2.80GHz 4MB 667FSB)
Memory 2x2048MB Samsung DDR2-667 5-5-5-15
Graphics NVIDIA GeForce 8800M GTS 512MB
NVIDIA drivers: 175.95 (Hacked from LaptopVideo2Go.com)
Display 17" WUXGA (1920x1200) Matte
(Samsung LTN170WU-L02)
Hard Drive 2x200GB Seagate Momentus 7200.2 in RAID 0
(ST9200420AS)
Optical Drive Toshiba TS-L802A HD-DVD Reader/DVD Recorder
Battery 9-Cell 86WHr
Operating System Windows Vista Home Premium 32-bit

Gateway P-6831 FX Test System
Processor Core 2 Duo T5450 (1.67GHz 2MB 667FSB)
Memory 1x1024MB + 1x2048MB Samsung DDR2-667 5-5-5-15
Graphics NVIDIA GeForce 8800M GTS 512MB
NVIDIA drivers: 167.46 (from Gateway)
Display 17" WXGA+ (1440x900) UltraBright
(Samsung LTN170X2-L02)
Hard Drive 250GB 5400RPM Western Digital
(Scorpio WD2500BEVS-22UST0)
Optical Drive Optiarc AD-7563A DVD Recorder
Battery 9-Cell 86WHr
Operating System Windows Vista Home Premium 32-bit

Gateway P-7811 FX Test System
Processor Core 2 Duo P8400 (2.26GHz 3MB 1066FSB)
Memory 2x2048MB Samsung DDR3-1066 7-7-7-20
Graphics NVIDIA GeForce 9800M GTS 512MB
NVIDIA drivers: 176.02 (Beta from Gateway)
Display 17" WUXGA (1920x1200) Glossy
(AU Optronics AUO 1088)
Hard Drive 200GB Seagate Momentus 7200.2
(ST9200420AS)
Optical Drive 8X SuperMulti DVD Recorder
Battery 9-Cell 86WHr
Operating System Windows Vista Home Premium 64-bit

Sager NP9262 Test System
Processor Core 2 Duo E6850 (3.00GHz 4MB 1333FSB)
Memory 2x1024MB Apacer Technology DDR2-800 5-5-5-18
Graphics Dual NVIDIA GeForce 8800M GTX 512MB
NVIDIA drivers: 175.95 (from Sager)
Display 17" WUXGA (1920x1200) Matte
(LG Philips LP171WU1? - "LPL 0801" in ASTRA32)
Hard Drive 160GB Seagate Momentus 7200.2
(ST9160823AS)
Optical Drive TSST Corp TS-L632H DVD Recorder
Battery 12-Cell 97WHr
Operating System Windows Vista Home Premium 64-bit

We certainly expect the Sager NP9262 to place at the top of the charts in pretty much everything, followed by the Alienware m15x and then the two Gateway notebooks. The P-171XL has a faster hard drive subsystem and processor while the P-7811 has a faster graphics chip. We will also be taking a detailed look at battery life, noise levels, and LCD quality. The Alienware m15x supports both discrete and integrated graphics, which we will benchmark where appropriate. (That means we won't be running our gaming tests - most of them fail completely, and even those that work don't provide acceptable performance.)

Sager NP9262 – Thoughts and Summary Standard Gaming Performance
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  • Th3G4mbl3r - Saturday, August 30, 2008 - link

    can you also laptop from killernotebook.com into the review as well? they are similar to the sager systems in the sense that they are also custom built based on ODM chassis by Mark from killernotebook. I am keen on looking at some head on comparisons for those with the rest of the field.
  • JarredWalton - Sunday, August 31, 2008 - link

    It's difficult to properly evaluate service and support, but since all three companies offer the same Clevo D901C notebook seen in this review, consider this configuration:

    1920x1200
    Q9550
    2x9800M GT
    2x2GB RAM
    3x320GB HDD in RAID 5
    Blu-ray Recorder
    3-year Warranty

    Sager NP9262: $4538.00
    AVADirect D901C: $4659
    Killer Notebooks Odachi: $5174

    There's no ability to select a warranty at KillerNotebooks.com (it's 1-year according to the "About Us" page), and the site layout does not instill confidence. The support section doesn't even list 8800M or 9800M drivers for the Odachi (apparently misspelled "Odach" in various locations). I'm definitely not going to recommend spending $500 or $600 more to get the same notebook with a lesser warranty.
  • SpacePope - Saturday, August 30, 2008 - link

    Thanks for the review, this is a good start. I've been researching gaming laptops myself lately because I plan on buying one soon. From what I've seen so far, the Asus G50V-A2 seems to have the most bang for the buck. Can you add this laptop to the review?

    Core 2 Duo T9400 2.53Ghz
    15.4" WSXGA+ (1680 x 1050)
    4GB DDR2
    2 x 7200rpm 200GB HD in raid
    Blu-ray drive
    NVIDIA GeForce 9700M GT (512MB VRAM DDR3)

    All for only $1899 on newegg (and I'm sure you can find it on sale somewhere).

    Personally, I think alienware is VERY over priced and a horrible value. They even use slower 667Mhz ram and last generation video cards. I've never heard anything good about their customer service. You can easily spend $1000 more on the alienware and get a worse laptop than the Asus. The gateway's are a good deal (and tempting) but I want a 15.4" screen, not 17". Finally, I don't know or trust Sager yet.
  • JarredWalton - Saturday, August 30, 2008 - link

    I've requested a couple ASUS laptops, so we'll see. Outside of the 15.4" part, I'd rate the Gateway higher in every area. However, form factor is a pretty major consideration. I expect the 9700M GT will be around 65-75% of the performance of the P-7811, so with a lower maximum resolution it should run pretty well.

    As for Sager, they have been selling laptops (with a moderate focus on enthusiast models) for over 20 years - since 1985. I would have no problem recommending them as a company. As such, the NP2096 is one option (15.4" 1680x1050, 9600M GT, P9500 CPU, 4GB RAM, and 320GB HDD for ~$1550). For more gaming performance, check out the NP8660. It's more expensive than the ASUS, the the 9800M GT is about twice as fast as the 9700M GT I'd guess. It actually looks quite similar to the m15x in terms of specs, for a lot less money. $2300 for a nearly top-end config. Too bad there's no Smart Bay battery, and I don't know if you can disable the discrete GPU.
  • Voldenuit - Friday, August 29, 2008 - link

    " this is the first laptop we've tested that includes the option to shut off the discrete graphics and use integrated graphics."

    Cough. A bit behind the times on laptops, are we? Several Asus and Sony models have featured this already, going back as far as 2 years ago.

    The Montevina refresh to the thinkpad T series (T400, T500) allow you to switch between integrated and discrete (Radeon 36xx) graphics on-the-fly in Vista. Now we're talkin'!
  • JarredWalton - Friday, August 29, 2008 - link

    "first laptop we've tested" says it all. I know perfectly well that others have done it, and I mention (repeatedly) that the Centrino 2 offerings are supposed to improve that functionality. Now I just need to get the appropriate companies to send laptops for review, which is always the difficult part. Still, the feature is far more useful IMO when you're using it with high-end GPUs. Switching between 8400M and IGP isn't as critical as switching between 8800M/9800M and IGP.
  • Jumpman23 - Friday, August 29, 2008 - link

    Another great "budget" gaming laptop would be the Asus G50V. The specs show the price to performance ratio is very good and comes equipped with 9700M GT. I would love to see a review on it.
  • yyrkoon - Friday, August 29, 2008 - link

    I would like to mention that the Sager seems to use close to what A 'medium power' Desktop would use for power consumption(minus the monitor). That is *if* these figures you're showing are accurate compared to my readings (or vice versa).

    Let me define a 'medium power' desktop system:

    ABIT IP35-E
    Intel E6550 @ 2.8Ghz
    2x2GB A-DATA 1.8v DDR2-800
    eVGA 9600GT 512MB
    1x DVD/CD burner(Liteon if applicable)
    4x HDDs (all Seagate if applicable)
    Antec Earthwatts 500

    Again, to be fair, what I measured was just the hardware in the case, so there are no LCD/CRT monitor figures counted in. At idle the above system uses 124-125W. while web surfing and doing other non intensive tasks the system above uses 128W-135W. With a full load on the CPU using orthos for an hour with 2 threads running(100% CPU load), this system uses 171-174W. In World of conflict, using the in game benchmark with everything maxed(no AA or AF) this machine has peaked up to 215W. Running the same benchmark with the game output limited to 30FPS uses only 195W peak, but mostly between 185-190W.

    World in conflict I have noticed so far can use by far the most power while gaming. Games such as Hellgate: London, and FEAR use around 180-195W(everything maxed).

    As a kind of interesting side comparison I checked the older card I used before the 9600 GT (eVGA 7600 GT KO edition) peak idle was 106w, while peak gaming was 168W. Much lower than I had anticipated. Granted the 9600GT is also lower in power usage than I had originally thought based on reviews, and about twice as fast as the 7600 GT in most games.

    Now I am very interested in how much power the new Intel mini ITX board, with x4500HD graphics and a reasonably powered desktop CPU would use. You hearing me Jarred? Derrick ? Anand ?! Would be nice if you guys could find out for all of us ; ) Something tells me that it'll only be marginally lower in power consumption though . . .
  • yyrkoon - Friday, August 29, 2008 - link

    Monitor I use is a 19" widescreen LCD. Native resolution of 1440x900, so that is the resolution I tend to play games in. All of my figures are based on a 1440x900 resolution(for what it is worth).
  • JarredWalton - Friday, August 29, 2008 - link

    I think Gary will have an X4500 article up next week. Don't quote me on that, as I know Gary and Anand have run into quite a few issues with the G45 testing, but it's not for lack of trying.

    As for power requirements, I figure the LCD is using between 10W and 20W of power, and while it might be using as much power as your midrange desktop, it also happens to be faster. You'd need 9600 GT SLI at the very least (~equal performance), or 8800 GT SLI (faster performance).

    The other item that we don't know is power supply/power brick efficiency. If they're both 80% efficient, that's one thing, but if the laptop is 70% efficient and your desktop is 80% efficient, that could account for another 20W or so. Anyway, since this *is* a desktop replacement, it's not too surprising that the power requirements extend into desktop territory.

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