Showing posts with label game. Show all posts
Showing posts with label game. Show all posts

Thursday, 2 July 2015

GIGABYTE P37X REVIEW: THIS POWER LAPTOP WILL PLAY ANY GAME YOU WANT

With the best single-chip mobile GPU on the market, this power laptop is built for speed. We review the Gigabyte P37X gaming laptop. Also see: Best gaming laptops 2015.
Standing at the top of Nvidia’s latest GTX 900 Series of mobile graphics processors is the GeForce GTX 980M. Gigabyte has taken its huge 17-inch P37X as the vehicle to carry this mighty mobile graphics engine.
Unlike its sub-brand of Aorus which apes Alienware in style and design, the Gigabyte P37X takes more typical Windows laptop construction, pure plastic all the way, sober black all over. Corners are gently radiused though and the finish is more satin than total matt.

GIGABYTE P37X REVIEW: BUILD AND DESIGN

The industrial design is unremarkable, and without the Gigabyte name stencilled on the screen bezel there’s nothing to indicate from which Taiwan factory this chassis originated. In its favour it’s not as brutally ugly and generic as the Clevo off-the-shelf chassis favoured by PC assemblers like Schenker/XMG; but the point for some gamers for these gaming laptops is to focus the bill of materials on the essential GPU and CPU to get the job done.
However it does manage to stay reasonably trim, given the screen size. At 23.2 mm, it’s a couple of millimetres under an imperial inch, and its 2.9 kg mass stays the right side of the shoulder-tilting three-kilo mark.
The P37X features a 17.3-inch IPS display from LG/Philips, with 1920 x 1080 pixel resolution. While there are very good arguments for not increasing resolution beyond full-HD for Windows and/or gaming purposes, it does result in a lower pixel density on the stretched panel – around 127 ppi, where a 13-inch has much sharper 166 ppi – which does mean rougher looking screen graphics than is now becoming standard in a retina-display world. See all laptop reviews.

GIGABYTE P37X REVIEW: PORTS ET AL

There’s a fair line-up of ports and connectors, including three video outputs – two digital through Mini DisplayPort and HDMI, and the old analogue standby of VGA D-Sub. There are four USB ports, but only the two on the right are USB 3.0. We struggle to understand how a modern laptop costing close to two grand can get away with fitting cheap and obsolescent USB 2.0 ports.
The keyboard is standard fare tiled type, here with short-action keys that provide a good typing experience. Helping to fill the wide top deck is a number keypad to the right and a row of six programmable macro keys labelled G and G1-G5 on the left. A white LED backlight can be triggered from Fn+Spacebar. It has two brightness levels and like many others suffers from distracting light bleed around the side of the keys. Some flex in the keyboard area is evident when you press down in the centre of the top deck.
We found the ELAN trackpad to be ‘sticky’ in operation, with a tardy cursor that needed care steering. Another issue was flakey Wi-Fi connectivity, where the laptop would routinely disconnect from our test router and require a restart to see any available networks.
The underside features an array of random stickers, screws and venting grilles, with one hatch in the centre to give easy access to the system memory.
Operating noise levels were variable, with fans sometimes revving up while the laptop was simply idling at the desktop. Under gaming load fan noise was relatively loud but no worse than most of the breed.

GIGABYTE P37X REVIEW: INSIDE

On main processor duty is the popular Haswell-generation quad-core from Intel, the Core i7-4720HQ clocked at 2.6 GHz and with another gigahertz of clock speed available in Turbo mode. There’s 16 GB of 1600 MHz memory on two SO-DIMM cards. Also see: Best laptops 2015.
For internal drives, Gigabyte offers the useful facility of a fast flash drive as C drive, and a large capacity 2.5in hard disk for 1000 GB of bulk storage.
The boot drive consists of two 128 GB mSATA SSDs, configured in RAID 0 to work around the SATA speed ceiling. This gives a total capacity of 256 GB (238 GiB, as reported by Windows). In our tests we measured up to 832 and 654 MB/s for sequential reads and writes, while 4 kB random reads and writes also stormed through, indicating peak input/output operations per second at a blistering 132, 000 IOPS with queued 4 kB random writes.
The Nvidia GeForce GTX 980M established itself as able to render all of our games tests with consumate ease. And with a huge 8 GB of video memory included, this GPU should be capable of driving external high-resolution displays with ease too.
Even with Batman: Arkaham City set to maximum detail settings at screen native full-HD resolution it could average 91 fps. Tomb Raider 2013 in full-HD and High quality zipped along at 221 fps, falling to a 77 fps average only after setting it to the highest Ultimate rendering.
Our final test of Metro: Last Light also showed 100 fps at High detail and a still playable 37 fps at Very High with additional rendering effects engaged.

GIGABYTE P37X: SPECS

  • 17.3in (1920x1080, 127ppi) AH-IPS matt anti-glare screen
  • Windows 8.1
  • 2.6GHz Intel Core i7-4720HQ (3.6GHz Turbo)
  • nVidia GeForce GTX 980M (8GB GDDR5), Intel HD Graphics 4600
  • 2x 128GB mSATA SSD, 1TB SATA HDD (7200rpm)
  • 16GB (2x 8GB) DDR3 (1600MHz) RAM
  • Gigabit ethernet
  • DVD-RAM DL tray-load, swappable
  • 1x Mini DisplayPort 1.3, 1x HDMI 1.4, 1x VGA D-Sub
  • 802.11ac dual-band 2x2 (Intel Wireless-AC 7260)
  • Bluetooth 4.0
  • stereo speakers
  • 3.5mm headphone jack with Toslink digital output, 3.5mm mic in
  • 2x USB 3.0, 2x USB 2.0
  • SD card slot
  • 0.9Mp webcam
  • 78Wh lithium-ion, non-removable battery
  • 415x286x23.2mm
  • 2894g
  • battery life: 4 hours 2 minutes
  • PCMark 7 score: 6305
  • PCMark 8 Home score (conventional/accelerated): 3300/4049
  • PCMark 8 Work score (con/accel): 3478/5156
  • Batman Arkham City (High/Very High/Extreme): 96/96/91fps
  • Tomb Raider (Normal/High/Utlra): 221/153/116fps
  • Metro: Last (Light High/Very High): 100/37fps

Wednesday, 1 July 2015

E3 2015 replay

E3 is the biggest gaming event on the tech calendar, and E3 2015 took place in Los Angeles this week, where keynotes from all of the major players in the gaming industry, including Bethesda, Microsoft, EA, Ubisoft, Sony, Square Enix, AMD and Nintendo, took the spotlight. New games and hardware announcements came from each company, and the gaming industry for 2015 and 2016 is looking more exciting than ever.  Here, we talk you through the E3 2015 schedule and what each game-maker announced.
You'll also like: 26 most anticipated games of 2015/2016: Best games of 2015 & 2016 for PS4, Xbox One, PC, Wii U, 3DS

Bethesda at E3 2015: 15 June, 3am BST - Replay

Above: Bethesda's E3 2015 highlights
For the first time, Bethesda hosted its own keynote at E3 2015. Bethesda had already taken the wraps off Fallout 4, but we got the world premiere of the game during its showcase, which you can re-watch here if you missed it (it was at 3am in the UK, after all). Bethesda also announced a new Doom game, Dishonored 2 and other titles. 

Microsoft Xbox at E3 2015: 15 June, 5:30pm BST - Replay

Above: Microsoft's E3 2015 highlights
Watch the Xbox E3 press conference replay here.
Microsoft's press conference will took place on the morning of the 16th June in the US, which was 5:30pm here in the UK.
Its Xbox E3 2015 Media Briefing was expected to be where the company unveiled a new Xbox One, but it went ahead and launched the Xbox a week early instead. However, during the keynote, the company did talk about its new Xbox One controller called Elite.
We heard more about Halo 5: Guardians, Rise of the Tomb Raider, Forza Motorsport 6, Fable Legends, Elite: Dangerous ,Gears of War and more.
Microsoft also used its keynote to talk more about HoloLens.
See also: Xbox One vs PS4 comparison.

EA at E3 2015: 15 June, 9pm BST - replay

Heavyweight games maker EA was next up on the press conference schedule. The company revealed numerous new games and trailers, including Mass Effect 4, Need for Speed, Plants vs Zombies: Garden Warfare 2,Mirror's Edge: Catalyst, Star Wars: Battlefront, FIFA 16, and Call of Duty Black Ops III.

Ubisoft at E3 2015: 15 June, 11pm BST - replay

Above: Ubisoft E3 2015 highlights
Ubisoft will be showed off Assassin's Creed Syndicate at E3 2015. It also showcased Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege and The Division, as well as a new Ghost Recon: Wildlands game.
There was no Watch Dogs 2 announcement, but instead we saw the unveiling of a new South Park game, a new Just Dance 2016 game with smartphones as controllers, and new DLC expansions for Trials Fusion and The Crew.

Sony at E3 2015: 15 June, 2am - replay

Above: Sony's E3 2015 highlights
Sony went big on games this year with the lack of any new hardware announcements for the PlayStation. We saw a new game unveiled called The Last Guardian, as well as a remake of Final Fantasy VII for PS4.
Other announcements included Horizon: Zero Dawn, Dreams, a new trailer for Uncharted 4, a new Hitman game and more. We also got some more details on No Man's Sky, and Project Morpheus.
See also: Sony PS4 1TB release date, price and specs.

Nintendo at E3 2015: 16 June, 5pm BST

Above: Nintendo E3 2015 highlights
Nintendo hosted its event on Tuesday 16 June, at 5pm UK time, showcasing new games including Star Fox Zero, Zelda: Tri Force Heroes, Mario Tennis Ultra Smash and more.

AMD at E3 2015: 16 June, 5pm BST

Oddly, AMD decided to host its keynote at the same time as Nintendo's, so that was 5pm on Tuesday 16 June. The company announced a new range of Radeon 300 GPUs in partnership with Microsoft, EA and Oculus.

Square Enix at E3 2015: 16 June, 6pm BST

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