But that'll take up even more space, and I won't be able to game at school / on the porch / in coffeeshops / at college.Zpock wrote:Instead of buying a "gaming" laptop for 1500$
Buy a desktop fo 1000$
Buy a laptop for 500$
Win.
Should I buy a gaming lappie now?
Moderator: Moderators
- Lindir The Green
- Posts: 815
- Joined: 04 May 2005, 15:09
grumpy_Bastard wrote:After that, I picked up a 1988 Zenith supersport 286. Why the old crap? $10.00 for a laptop that works with a good battery, for typing and banging around is well worth it.
YOU OWN!!!!
I can only imagine you sitting next to the hordes of macbooks users at UNI... With that THING..
FixedZpock wrote:Nicely put the main reason why you would want a gaming laptop.Lindir The Green wrote: But that'll take up even more space, and I won't be able to game at school / on the porch / in coffeeshops / at college.
But speaking of, this thread is now officially go no where. I would probably be better off getting an OLPC.
Last edited by superppl on 20 Mar 2007, 06:36, edited 1 time in total.
Lindir, it'd be cheaper to buy a £200 laptop with low specs and a gaming desktop and use a remote terminal to play games, you'd get better battery life, performance, and itd be much cheaper.
However I'd at least try out someone elses gaming laptop first, if you think that playing a game on max detail on a gaming laptop is the same as on an equivilant desktop then you're in for a surprise.
Companies bring out gaming laptops for the same reason they release overclocked hardware a week before they're to be made obsolete, the same reason you can buy geforce 7900GX2's for nearly twice the price of an 8800GTS despite the 8800 having double the performance, and why companies like dell charge you £600 to upgrade from a 7xxx series gfx card to an 8xxx card despite the 8800GTS only being around £200. You're being ripped off plain and simple. There is no such thing as a true gaming laptop.
However I'd at least try out someone elses gaming laptop first, if you think that playing a game on max detail on a gaming laptop is the same as on an equivilant desktop then you're in for a surprise.
Companies bring out gaming laptops for the same reason they release overclocked hardware a week before they're to be made obsolete, the same reason you can buy geforce 7900GX2's for nearly twice the price of an 8800GTS despite the 8800 having double the performance, and why companies like dell charge you £600 to upgrade from a 7xxx series gfx card to an 8xxx card despite the 8800GTS only being around £200. You're being ripped off plain and simple. There is no such thing as a true gaming laptop.
On full load? I mean it will be on full load if you play games which demand much of your hardware (read: graphics card and CPU).
I'd never opt for a laptop, mainly because it will be most of the time slower than a PC while it's about 50% more expensive, if you want a laptop suitable to play games for more than a year that is, which is what you want. Unless you can shit money, go for a PC. Or expect your cheaper laptop to be outdated rather soon.
I'd never opt for a laptop, mainly because it will be most of the time slower than a PC while it's about 50% more expensive, if you want a laptop suitable to play games for more than a year that is, which is what you want. Unless you can shit money, go for a PC. Or expect your cheaper laptop to be outdated rather soon.
- grumpy_Bastard
- Posts: 105
- Joined: 18 Oct 2006, 22:31
The zenith, im not sure.. if the screen is on and you are using the hard drive, its going to be quite a bit different than just a crappy 12Mhz cpu idling in word-processing. The backlight alone uses about 0.3 Amps, though I cant imagine a 286 CPU and 640K ram using much. The most Ive ever gotten out of it before was about 10 hours, even longer might be possible if the batteries wernt 15 years old at the time.superppl wrote:Actually, a 8800GTS is closer to three times as strong as an 7900GX2, and is cheaper.
What's the battery life of that Zenith SuperSport. I've seen a macbook get 8 hours.
As far as the macbook goes, thats a bit of an unfair comparison. MSDOS/win 2.03 + Word perfect running from ram on a 12Mhz cpu, vs bloatOS and a G3.
The ibook things I had to use: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBook (Blueberry). Stupidest looking PC, ever. Usually averaged 3-4 hours on those things before they needed to be charged.
But anyways, ill put together a few things on newegg for comparison.
EDIT:
Alright, put together something on newegg real quick while still half asleep.
DVD Burner - $28.00
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6827136108
somewhat small mATX case - $99.00
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6811129014
2x 320GB Hitachi's - 159.98
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6822145129
Crappy 17" LCD - 144.98
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6824112004
Radeon X1600PRO 512MB - $104.00, $30.00 rebate = $70.00
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6814161042
Sparkle 400W - 44.98
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6817103013
2x crappy A-Data 1GB - $121.98
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6820211059
Asus mATX motherboard - $54.99
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6813131162
Core 2 Duo E4300 - $169.00
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6819115013
Total of $929.00. No, I didnt pick out a nice case, there are smaller ones that will take a real videocard and a real PSU (Q-pack, I beleive). The Videocard, not the best... Sparkle was rated somewhat well out as far as PSUs go. Yes, you could go with 1GB, and yes, 1 hard drive would be fine.
Can be upgrades to an 8800GT, more ram, more hard drives, faster cpu... but this would be more than enough for right now.
By the time its shipped, $1k. As far as "gaming laptops" go on newegg:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductLi ... der=PRICED
(Bottom of the page)
CPU Type: Intel Core 2 Duo T7600 2.33GHz
Graphics Card: NVIDIA GeForce Go 7400 and Intel GMA950
Hard Disk: 160GB
Memory Size: 2GB DDR2
Operating System: Windows XP Professional
Optical Drive: DVD±R/RW
Screen: 13.3" WXGA
Video Memory: NVIDIA GeForce Go 7400(TurboCache up to 128MB) and GMA950(Shared up to 128MB)
$2,416.99
Now, to be fair, lets just look at laptops which are no more than twice the price of the desktop PC I priced out : http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductLi ... =4&bop=And
Nothing from then on down in price, really strikes me as a laptop that would really be suitable for any kind of "gaming" as an alternative to a desktop.
- Lindir The Green
- Posts: 815
- Joined: 04 May 2005, 15:09
I don't think that. I do think though that it would be much much more powerful than any computer I've ever used. Currently that title belongs to the family computer, which has a 2.8 Ghz Pentium 4 and a FX 5200.AF wrote:Lindir, it'd be cheaper to buy a £200 laptop with low specs and a gaming desktop and use a remote terminal to play games, you'd get better battery life, performance, and itd be much cheaper.
However I'd at least try out someone elses gaming laptop first, if you think that playing a game on max detail on a gaming laptop is the same as on an equivilant desktop then you're in for a surprise.
Well, it isn't really a "gaming laptop," but one of its major purposes for me is gaming. And yes, I know it is a rip off compared to the equivelant desktop. But a desktop really isn't an option, for many reasons, mostly relating to my parents:Companies bring out gaming laptops for the same reason they release overclocked hardware a week before they're to be made obsolete, the same reason you can buy geforce 7900GX2's for nearly twice the price of an 8800GTS despite the 8800 having double the performance, and why companies like dell charge you £600 to upgrade from a 7xxx series gfx card to an 8xxx card despite the 8800GTS only being around £200. You're being ripped off plain and simple. There is no such thing as a true gaming laptop.
-I can't have internet access in my room, and there is no space for another desktop somewhere else in the house.
-While the money is mine, it was mostly supplied by my parents, and is earmarked for a laptop.
-Next year I'll be in college, but since I'm young I'll still be living at home. I don't want to take the bus home whenever I want to game; I would much rather be able to on campus. for reasons also due to some unreasonable parental restrictions... <_< >_> But don't quote me on that
Oh, and grumpy_Bastard:
The Newegg laptops are ripoffs, at least spec wise. A similar laptop from Dell is ~<$1400.
I don't think I can overstate this....
I am not an idiot or a newbie when it comes to computers!!!
Yes I know about building computers, all of my pc's were custom built, by me. I find that newegg has is about 10% cheaper than the suggested retail prices, where as fry and other stores tend to be 10-20% more expensive.
I know with $1500 I could build a kick ass pc, hell I built my last for ~600 and it played most games maxed out.
I am not an idiot or a newbie when it comes to computers!!!
Yes I know about building computers, all of my pc's were custom built, by me. I find that newegg has is about 10% cheaper than the suggested retail prices, where as fry and other stores tend to be 10-20% more expensive.
I know with $1500 I could build a kick ass pc, hell I built my last for ~600 and it played most games maxed out.
Dell laptops are terrible with poor designs and miserable support. I have never had a Dell laptop which has not suffered from at least two of these issues; overheating/fan failure, monitor/graphics card instability, modular failure (Given the swappable drives), RAM failure, power supply failure or hard drive failure.Lindir The Green wrote: The Newegg laptops are ripoffs, at least spec wise. A similar laptop from Dell is ~<$1400.
- Lindir The Green
- Posts: 815
- Joined: 04 May 2005, 15:09
Dell's first laptops were absolutely terrible. My friend had one and after a week he wanted to throw it into a wall. The same isn't true with their more recent laptops, their actually solid and they have their stuff straight.neddiedrow wrote:Dell laptops are terrible with poor designs and miserable support. I have never had a Dell laptop which has not suffered from at least two of these issues; overheating/fan failure, monitor/graphics card instability, modular failure (Given the swappable drives), RAM failure, power supply failure or hard drive failure.Lindir The Green wrote: The Newegg laptops are ripoffs, at least spec wise. A similar laptop from Dell is ~<$1400.
But for savings, major oems tend to rip you off.
http://www.johnlewis.com/Computing/Comp ... oduct.aspx
(what a shit url)
im getting this lawl
but i get 25 percent off for working there
and
i only pay for half the full price anyway (PARENTS 'r' US)
so for me a grand total of 325 quid (or there abouts)
win win
ps, dont get alienware they are built by dell. lol
(what a shit url)
im getting this lawl
but i get 25 percent off for working there
and
i only pay for half the full price anyway (PARENTS 'r' US)
so for me a grand total of 325 quid (or there abouts)
win win
ps, dont get alienware they are built by dell. lol
Meh, he's got a point.
If he wants to game ON THE MOVE, he's gotta get a gaming laptop. Thou i would proably be happy with a last or last last years model and be able to play som HL2 and Q3 or something on it. I'd say go for the semi good model. Having a 1989 laptop can be annoying sometimes, and buying one as a total new deskop replacement is... well, wasting money. But hey, if you REALLY need Quake Wars and Supcom in class so sure, knock yourself out.
Rich bastard.
If he wants to game ON THE MOVE, he's gotta get a gaming laptop. Thou i would proably be happy with a last or last last years model and be able to play som HL2 and Q3 or something on it. I'd say go for the semi good model. Having a 1989 laptop can be annoying sometimes, and buying one as a total new deskop replacement is... well, wasting money. But hey, if you REALLY need Quake Wars and Supcom in class so sure, knock yourself out.
Rich bastard.

Actually, my parents convinced themselves that I need a laptop, so I wanna take advantage, but I have to pay for half so I sold my desktop. And I'm not allowed to get another desktop.Ishach wrote:he convinced his parents he needs a laptop for school and now he is trying to pick the one that plays games the best, its not rocket science guys
Anyhow, I'm usually either at one of my friends house, the library or school and I can't keep a desktop in my backpack.
Pretty much how I got one. I needed a computer for college, I found the best priced machine for reliability, cost and ability... and I got quite possibly the only new thing of any significance I have ever owned.Ishach wrote:he convinced his parents he needs a laptop for school and now he is trying to pick the one that plays games the best, its not rocket science guys