Recommendations and Conclusion

So now that we have the nitty-gritty out of the way, how do we break things down? If you're looking strictly at pure performance, parts from either AMD or NVIDIA are going to be suitable for you (budget notwithstanding.) In the interests of fairness we'll include Intel in the pro and con conversation.

First, Intel has the best dedicated video encoding hardware on the market. AMD and NVIDIA both offer solutions that allow you to harness their shaders to substantially accelerate video encoding, but Intel's Quick Sync is best of breed (behind pure CPU-based encoding), offering a healthy improvement in encoding speed while producing the best output short of doing encoding on the CPU itself. It's worth noting, though, that NVIDIA solutions and AMD ones supporting switchable graphics can take advantage of Quick Sync, so you don't necessarily have to tie yourself down to Intel to benefit from it.

If you take video encoding out of the equation, unfortunately AMD isn't quite as strong in terms of feature offerings, boiling down to arguably slightly better image quality and support for Eyefinity (provided the notebook has a DisplayPort.) They do have a hybrid graphics solution similar to Optimus, but availability is spotty and you'll have to research the notebook model you're looking at to see if their switchable graphics are supported. NVIDIA's Optimus on the other hand is pervasive and mature, and their mobile graphics drivers are more widely supported than AMD's. 3D Vision, CUDA, and PhysX are much more niche, with AMD also offering 3D support and materializing in 3D-ready notebooks. If you have a need for CUDA or a desire for PhysX, your graphics vendor has been decided for you.

Knowing what each vendor offers, now we just have to know what to look for.

The netbook or ultraportable gamer is pretty much stuck with either buying a netbook with AMD's E-350 processor or paying through the nose for an Alienware M11x (spoiler alert: heavier than most "netbooks.") That's not a horrible thing as the E-350 has a capable graphics core, but even though the CPU side is faster than dual-core Atom it's still not quite enough to pick up the slack.

Gamers on an extreme budget used to be more or less screwed, but thankfully that's changed. Notebooks with AMD's A6 or A8 processors are going to be your one-stop shop, offering a tantalizing mix of middle-of-the-road CPU performance with remarkably fast integrated graphics hardware. There's a reason AMD refers to the A6 and A8 graphics hardware as "discrete-class" and for once it's not just marketing jargon. If you want to game for under $600, this is the way to go. In fact, it's even a little difficult to recommend spending up for a notebook with anything less than a GeForce GT 540M or Radeon HD 6500M/6600M/6700M unless you really need the faster CPU on top of it. If gaming while on the battery is important to you, then you need to be looking for Llano.

Users looking for a more well-rounded notebook would probably be well served by the aforementioned GeForce GT 540M or Radeon HD 6500M/6600M. These will hang out between about $700 and a grand and notebooks using these chips are going to be fairly mainstream in form factor, so you won't be lugging a land monster around. Be forewarned, though, these GPUs are going to be inadequate for driving games at 1080p and may still struggle at 1600x900.

The serious gamer looking for an affordable machine should be gunning straight for notebooks with NVIDIA's GeForce GTX 560M. This, or AMD's Radeon HD 6800M, will be the bare minimum for gaming comfortably at 1080p, but honestly the GTX 560M is liable to be the sweet spot in offering the very best balance in form factor favoring performance before you start getting into the huge, heavy desktop replacement notebooks.

Finally, for those who money is no object to, just about anything from the Radeon HD 6900M series or the GTX 570M or 580M is going to do the trick, and for the truly excessive users, an SLI or Crossfire notebook will yield dividends.

Update: Intel's engineers took umbrage with our suggestion that Intel's integrated graphics driver quality is still poor, and they were right to do so. While older graphics architectures may still be a bit fraught, Sandy Bridge is an overwhelming improvement. This guide has been updated to reflect that fact.

NVIDIA GeForce 500M Graphics
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  • sidneyleejohnson - Sunday, July 10, 2011 - link

    In that regards:
    external note: All laptops with gtx580m would support 3d vision on an external monitor say your Samsung 2011 3d tv beamed via sibeam wirelesshd internal transmitter(m18x)
    2) but to meet your needs Clevo and Alienware has the answer:
    the P170HM3(Eurocom Neptune etc.) or the M17x

    as for dual 580m sli until m18x offers a 120hz option we'll have to wait for the
    and the SLI-equipped P270WN (ETA ~Nov(this is a "desktop CPU" laptop hexcore new motherboard/chipset)
  • JNo - Friday, July 8, 2011 - link

    I too would like to voice that this subject matter is very important and great to see an article covering what is a very nebulous area. I'll always prefer the sheer grunt & value of a desktop but we can't ignore that laptops are now outselling them. And searching for notebooks which can play some games and have battery life is of great interest to me (and many others).

    Obviously, unlike desktops, you can't do true apples-to-apples comparisons with laptop gfx but nevertheless, it would be good to some performance comparison graphs into the article even though it would have to come with the caveat stating that they are only loosely comparable.

    Btw, don't know which GT 555M it is or even if a third type but this unbelievably beautiful 13" i7 nvid GT555M LG laptop (yes, i know, LG!) has what's designated a N12P variant of the 555M:

    http://www.engadget.com/2011/06/10/new-lg-p330-lap...
  • mason.s - Friday, July 8, 2011 - link

    I was lucky enough to get a gem of a gaming laptop in the Acer Aspire AS5552G763. I snagged it while it was on a super deep discount, at $589. After gaming with it for a couple of months, I can say that the Radeon 6650M is a very capable GPU at the laptop's native res (an admittedly anemic 1366x768). I've gotta say I was truly blessed to pick up this machine at the price. You can check it out at the link I used to buy it. It's still at the lower-middle end of the price range for this kind of laptop at $790:

    http://www.buy.com/prod/acer-aspire-as5552g7632-15...
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