Wireless

MSI has been utilizing Killer networking for quite a while now, and that continues with the GE75 Raider, but luckily for MSI, the quality of the Killer wireless took a major step forward when Killer partnered with Intel to use the latest Intel 9260 wireless adapter as their new base wireless chip. Whether or not you feel the Killer software stack is worth it, the Qualcomm Atheros base wireless in the Killer 1535 card was unreliable, which is a common feature on practically all wireless solutions other than Intel in 2019.

WiFi Performance - TCP

Performance wise, the latest Killer performs just as well as the base Intel would, and if you have a new router which supports 160 MHz channels, performance would be even higher, since this was tested against a standard 802.11ac router. The stability is excellent as well, and at no time did the laptop ever wake up without network connection, nor did the networking ever drop off in use. The combination of an excellent wireless card along with a dedicated Gigabit Ethernet connection provides great performance no matter which method you choose to connect. Considering the Ethernet is located on the opposite side as the power, from a desk cleanliness perspective, a good wireless solution helps tremendously.

Audio

MSI offers what they brand as “Giant Speakers” on the GE75 Raider, and that consists of two 3-Watt speakers combined with two 3-Watt subwoofers. They also continue their partnership with Nahimic for the software side of their audio solution, offering quite a few options for sound settings, microphone settings, and even sound tracking for use in games to get a visual indication of where sound is coming from.

The speakers themselves offer excellent volume, with the GE75 Raider hitting up to 85 dB(A) measured one inch over the trackpad. The sound quality out of the box was a bit mixed, with the mid-range too pronounced, but once adjusted in the Nahimic software the sound quality from the GE75 Raider was surprisingly good. The small subwoofers do help on the bottom end of the range, and the GE75 ended up being one of the best sounding laptops I’ve heard.

Thermals

All gaming laptops have one thing they have to deal with – heat. Intel has settled in on the 45-Watt range for their top laptop processors, but the massive GPUs in gaming laptops can easily draw three times that themselves. Moving heat out of the laptop is the key component to any gaming laptop, since a laptop that throttles isn’t going to be great for long gaming sessions.

As with most gaming laptops, MSI offers a variety of fan speed settings in their Dragon Center software, and also accessible with a dedicated hardware button on the right side of the keyboard deck. They offer a Cooler Booster setting which ramps the fans up to their maximum, or you can choose automatic, or set the fans lower as well if you’d prefer a quieter machine, although of course the quieter it is the more likely it will thermally throttle.

To see how the GE75 Raider performs under load, it was run against Shadow of the Tomb Raider at our Enthusiast settings for over an hour. The fan speeds were alternated between the Cooler Booster mode and Automatic to test the impact as well.

Overall the laptop shows no signs of thermally limiting itself and gradually losing GPU frequency. The GPU and CPU both do run very warm, with the GPU at about 85°C and the CPU getting as warm as 99°C, but even after a long session the system is able to keep up with the demands. Interestingly the Cooler Booster mode produced the same fan speeds and cooling capabilities as Automatic, it just gets there a lot quicker, and both offer the same levels of cooling and noise.

As far as noise, the laptop is loud, as expected, coming in at over 55 dB(A) sound pressure level measured one inch over the trackpad, but that’s in-line with many gaming laptops, and for the performance available, very reasonable. Larger true DTR type machines may be able to offer a bit less noise from the fans, thanks to more room for larger, slower fans that can move more air, but as with any gaming laptop you’d really need a good set of closed back headphones regardless.

Software

MSI doesn’t install much in the way of software outside of their own utilities, which is great to see. There was no trialware installed that you’d have to deal with out of the box, and the utilities they do install are very useful.

MSI’s Dragon Center is likely their showcase, and while the looks of the software leave something to be desired, the functionality of Dragon Center is up there with the best suites around. You can easily monitor performance and temperatures of the internal components, as well as adjust their behavior with several pre-defined modes. MSI also offers some in-built overclocking as well. If you’d prefer the Windows key on the left, as I do, you can swap it with the Fn key in the software, and perform basic maintenance tasks as well.

Dragon Center is looking a bit dated, and it would be nice to see it overhauled into a more modern looking, cleaner package, but there’s no doubt as to the functionality available.

In addition, MSI includes the SteelSeries software which allows you to customize the keyboard backlighting and create key bindings for macros.

Then of course there’s the MSI True Color software which we already covered in the display section which is the best display software in the gaming laptop segment.

So, overall, MSI offers some excellent functionality with their included software, without bogging down the system with any trialware, which is important considering the premium pricing they are asking.

Battery Life and Charge Time Final Words
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  • Opencg - Friday, July 12, 2019 - link

    I dont trust any of these hybrids. Gaming laptop with what appears to be high end silicon but the clocks and tdp are very gimp.

    Expect a gimped power system, obviously gimped clocks, gimped ec throttle conditions, gimped vbios throttle limits, poor cooling system cause everyone wants to go thin.

    At the end of the day expect all the performance of a 5 year old desktop for way more money.

    If you really want something that gives you the performance of the silicon you buy look at clevo.
  • Opencg - Friday, July 12, 2019 - link

    Also expect random issues due to everything I listed where your laptop regularly drops to 1/4 its normal framerate while it throttles.
  • Tom001 - Saturday, July 13, 2019 - link

    I agree. I found old games to be very snappy and exelent rates on these so called gaming laptops. @£17 K or USD 3900 you can build a massive 3 in one or even a better budget build PC for a fraction of these gaming laptops with full future / longterm upgrade options. It just makes sense when you then will be able to aquire a proper gaming top quality screen (Which have become quite affordable lately) as its the screen we will be concentrating on all of the time. With a budget build a gamer can accomplish fenominal performance with a decent low priced board and accompaning top end CPU, super fast ssd hard drives (their pricing / cost drop by the day) and a medium GPU Card. Better buy a mid range laptop for work with excellent battery life and then shop around for your budget gaming rig. Amazing specials are on offer every now and again Newegg and Amazon. I'd rather settle for the best affordable monitor HDMI and a proper budget build as I can always connect the laptop screen as a second screen with all of the speed and functionality. Work does come first and then gaming. I guess lol :)
  • Orange_Swan - Sunday, July 14, 2019 - link

    which is why I'm going for the laptop + eGPU, for my next computer, probably something like a razor blade or a MacBook Pro
  • erple2 - Saturday, August 24, 2019 - link

    Gaming on a MacBook Pro is .. well, it's awful. It's not as good as on windows for the few games that are supported, and that assume you find a Mac game in the first place.
  • 0ldman79 - Monday, July 15, 2019 - link

    Question, when partitioning an SSD like this, does that keep the drive rewrites in that partition or does it still physically spread them out as needed?

    In other words will a 100GB partition that is used often wear out part of the drive faster than just using the entire drive as one partition?
  • PeachNCream - Monday, July 15, 2019 - link

    Partitioning doesn't adversely confine writing data to a specific portion of the SSD's physical storage area. You can split up your drive in the most nonsense way you want and still reap the benefits of wear leveling that happen behind-the-scenes and beneath any file system/partitioning you define.
  • Ronn91 - Friday, July 19, 2019 - link

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  • evagrey - Wednesday, July 31, 2019 - link

    On a serious note, after reading the comments I got a little confused about the laptop. However, to recover the Hacked Roadrunner Email Account you can get help at http://www.emailhelpdesks.co/hacked-roadrunner-ema... in minutes.

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