Display

MSI has turned to Samsung to supply the 18.4-inch display panel, and it is a SDC4C48 model, which is a Plane to Line Switching (PLS) model, which in operation is very similar in characteristics to In-Plane Switching (IPS) panels. The GT80 Titan has great viewing angles, and surprisingly for such a large display, quite even light distribution. We’ll get into the display calibration in a second.

At just 1920x1080, the massive (for a notebook) display comes in at just around 120 pixels per inch, so it is far from high DPI. This can have some advantages though since you never have to deal with anything other than 100% scaling, and gaming is still one area where high DPI can cause issues with menu and loading screens. Still, considering the power packed into this notebook, it is a bit of a shame that no one can supply a high DPI panel this large. Perhaps next year.

The other notable feature missing from this display is G-SYNC support. I asked MSI about this and they said they have no plans to offer it in this model at this time, however as with all things, that may change in the future. The lucky thing is that the GT80 is plenty fast, so perhaps they feel that the added cost of G-SYNC would not offer as much value as it would on a device with less graphical prowess.

So with those remarks out of the way, let’s turn our attention to the display characteristics. We measure the display brightness and contrast using an X-Rite i1Display Pro colorimeter, and the color accuracy and grayscale with the X-Rite i1Pro spectrophotometer. On the software side, we leverage SpectraCal’s CalMAN 5 suite with a custom workflow.

The GT80 Titan comes with some custom software to allow you to choose from several color points. I’ll dig into that software later in the review, but for the color testing I chose the sRGB setting since that is the target we are after with our testing suite.

Brightness and Contrast

Display - Max Brightness

Display - Black Levels

Display - Contrast Ratio

The GT80 Titan gets off to a great start, with a display that can get to almost 400 nits brightness. This is plenty for almost any environment that the notebook would be expected to be used in. The good black levels contribute to an overall contrast ratio of over 1100:1, which is also a great result.

Grayscale and White Point

Display - Grayscale Accuracy

Display - White Point

Using the built in software and choosing sRGB gives us a grayscale result that is one of the most accurate we have seen. At 1.8, the GT80 Titan is well under the 3.0 level where inaccuracies can be seen. Unfortunately the white point is a bit high at 8000 due to a lack of reds in the white images.

Saturation

Display - Saturation Accuracy

The saturation scores are also excellent coming in at 1.88. This is again well under the 3.0 level where inaccuracies can be seen. Magenta is a bit too blue, and the reds and greens are slightly off target, but only a bit. According to CalMAN the display covers 93% of the sRGB color space.

GMB

Display - GMB Accuracy

The GMB score is the most comprehensive test and here the display does not do quite as well, although an overall score of 3.6 is still pretty decent. The colors with the most issues were the flesh tones and some of the teals, which had a dE score over 8. Still, the overall display is excellent and the built in software has done a great job at targeting sRGB.

Normally I would also do a calibrated result, but since the Titan comes with its own software to choose the sRGB space, and the fact that the grayscale is so good, there is little need. MSI has done a great job with the display as far as accuracy.

Display Software

MSI includes their True Color software package which lets you choose from, and adjust, several pre-loaded modes intended for different purposes. I have just shown how good of a job the sRGB mode provides, but there is also a couple of other modes which are interesting.

First is the gaming mode. This mode lets you adjust the brightness, contrast, and gamma settings on the display which can help bring out detail especially in some of the really dark games out there where it can be difficult to see where you are going. It is nice that this is a setting you can toggle on and off, so that you don’t have to break your display characteristics for the rest of your day.

Another interesting mode is the Anti-Blue mode, and you can customize how much blue is on the display. I’m not a doctor, so I don’t know if blue light really can lead to eye strain, but for those that appreciate it this is a nice setting they can toggle on when needed.

Gallery: TrueColor

The software also has movie, designer, and office modes, which all offer up some amount of customization. I have never been a fan of bloat-ware, but when a company offers up something useful like this it is appreciated. Being able to select sRGB and have it almost perfectly spot on is an impressive feat, and the ease of use means that more people will have access to an accurate display.

GPU Performance Battery Life and Charging
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  • drzzz - Saturday, June 27, 2015 - link

    The article title is misleading. While this laptop can be equipped impressively it has several short comings as well. Over all the people that drop 3400$ (as tested or 3800$ max) on a gaming system get a much more powerful desktop than this laptop for same money. That is why I think the title is misleading. This is a niche product for a group of people that are willing to spend huge amounts of money to have the fastest of a specific thing.

    The lack of a 2560x1440 screen or even better 3840x2160 screen at this price point is a real let down. Not having 2560x1440 as the base screen is a real missed chance.

    The 128GB raided drives (raid 0) do offer 256GB of fast access storage but for the price point I would have preferred to see the raid be 500GB to 1TB SM951's with NVM support and the HDD just dropped. Another really big missed opportunity. Really big one.

    Also totally insulting that highest end model provides only 24GB of memory yet support for 32GB exist. Again like the screen and SSD components you can really see where they are short changing you for the keyboard and SLI mobile graphics.

    My experience with MSI is that there is always a clearly visible set of areas that they cut corners to give you some great thing(s) and base the price on those things vice building a truly well rounded device. It comes down to the price point for me. At over 3000$ for a laptop I expect certain things like 32GB ram. Large SSD storage only. 1440p+ screen when the system clearly has the power to push that level of resolution.

    Overall not impressed by this MSI offering. I would by the GT72 first and have money left over for a steak dinner and some good booze.
  • Notmyusualid - Wednesday, July 1, 2015 - link

    PLEASE... can we have an end to the 'you could build a faster desktop for less' argument. It is not a desktop, it is a laptop. Some of cannot own desktops, due to frequent travel.
  • mlambert890 - Monday, August 24, 2015 - link

    Large laptop panels above 1080p dont exist. Period. No one is making them.

    So what should they do? Not release it at all? Sorry but no.

    People always find things to nitpick but the screen issue is NOT something an OEM can control.
  • PulloDimo - Saturday, June 27, 2015 - link

    I really want one badly. I wish I could trade in my Lenovo Thinkpad W541 for one of these babies. I have always been looking for a competent gaming laptop that could play all games with a real keyboard. This is it right here :-D
  • AllanMoore - Saturday, June 27, 2015 - link

    Cinebench results are quite impressive! http://picoolio.net/image/Tnw
  • geek005 - Saturday, June 27, 2015 - link

    sRBG setting shown in here with regard to msi gt72 dominator pro ...is it according to the newest model with ips screen(talking about msi gt72 dominator pro g-14 series)..or older with TN panel...??
  • siberus - Saturday, June 27, 2015 - link

    Msi for the love of god can you please stop using killer nics technology. Their drivers are so terrible.
    On my gt70 if i switch in and out of airplane mode my Bluetooths funtionality is lost untill I uninstall the driver and reinstall it >.>
  • Notmyusualid - Saturday, June 27, 2015 - link

    Worry no longer my friend.

    I've written to them, and got little help, and no resoultion from them whatsoever, with my Killer issues.

    The solution is, given that their hardware is always other manufacturers, is to find the original wireless-chip type, and install the driver for that.

    For example;

    Killer 1103, 3x3 mimo card, is MADE-BY Atheros, and the original chip is an AR9380.
    Link: https://www.atheros.cz/atheros-wireless-download.p...

    Using the Atheros driver, all is well. However, I got so fed up, I changed both machines with Killer 1103s to Intel 6300, and 5300.
  • odedia - Saturday, June 27, 2015 - link

    I find it amazing that a LAPTOP this powerful has such a better temperature handling compared to my iMac 5k. The iMac easily gets to 92 degrees CPU and can even reach 104 degrees GPU (on the M295X model).
  • DanNeely - Saturday, June 27, 2015 - link

    Thats because your iPride is optimized to look thin not for sustained performance.

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