tunicata

Tunicate Tamer
Location
Brooklyn, NY
Rating - 100%
163   0   0
Hey folks,
My little bro wants a gaming laptop.

He suggested the Lenovo Y40. Says it may go for $679 over the holidays.
Is that the lowest cost for a good laptop that can play most popular games, WOW, Dragon Age Inquisition, online games like skyrim, fallout 3, maspect 3 multiplayer. lots of RPGs.

Not a lot of intense graphic heavy games.
Would like to play games that require a disc or at some point play a dvd (I see the y40 doesn't have an optical drive)



He does not want a desktop. He plans on visiting his friends a lot and would want to bring the laptop along.
 

tunicata

Tunicate Tamer
Location
Brooklyn, NY
Rating - 100%
163   0   0
lol, well, he is a good kid and this is his only hobby. He has had a lot of progress for himself and I know he'll appreciate it.

I do worry about him losing it/getting robbed since it's a large computer and it'll be pretty obvious in a laptop bag.
 

Widdy

Moderator
Vendor
Rating - 100%
75   0   0
Nice specs for that price. There's a handful of sub $1000 gaming laptops, and Lenovo has a decent reputation. I've only dealt with overpriced Alienware. Since he suggested the Y40 to you, I'm going to assume he knows others with it... peer acceptance can be a huge factor. :)

https://laptopninja.io/finding-the-best-gaming-laptops-under-1000-dollars/


@Rookie07, wow XCom! Now that's a great game! I can't believe the series is still going... and it looks great. Now I just have to free up 12hrs/day for it :happysad:
 

tunicata

Tunicate Tamer
Location
Brooklyn, NY
Rating - 100%
163   0   0
Thanks Widdy, if I don't find anything with same or better specs for that price then I'll get the y40.

Lol, Zany, I didn't buy MYSELF an alienware computer when I was actually into gaming. The y40 is like half the price for an entry level Alien computer!
 

Rob&Gab

Advanced Reefer
Location
Staten Island
Rating - 100%
243   0   0
Alienware is daaaaaaaaaaa bomb. Essp for gaming . till I got mad one day and tossed it into a wall... Lol #hotheadedmuch?! For gaming youwanna get good laptops and its worth it for 650$ just don't buy coral for a week or too.
 

tunicata

Tunicate Tamer
Location
Brooklyn, NY
Rating - 100%
163   0   0
Lol, I see mixed reviews from Alienware but have always loved the aesthetics.

I'll get him the laptop for holiday present since the price is pretty static at 650 to 700. I'll check out that laptop richer posted too.

I'm in the process of building my own desktop gaming and video processing capable computer too. Getting the pieces over time. It will be mid level with a $600 budget. I hope it works out
 
Location
Seattle
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Hey tunicata,
I recently went through exhaustive reasearch when searching for a gaming laptop under $1000 for my son. Plus, I do a lot of coding, website speed audits, and graphic design for web incliding web video.

My son plays all the top "hardware taxing" games with 3D render engines, HD high-motion graphics, plus the added strain of rendering online multiplayers from all over the world... on screen and in real time. Yeah, graphics powerhouse for sure.

Here is what I bought from newegg.com for $549. It rocks and has better graphical specs than than the latest base model iMac:

1) ACER V3-572G-54S6 : $549 at newegg.com ( best price online right now)
Intel Core i5 4210U (1.70GHz /2.7GHz with "turbo boost")
8GB DDR3L Memory
1TB HDD
NVIDIA GeForce GT 840M w/ 2GB DDR3 memory
15.6" 1366 x 768 "CineCrystal" screen (just under full HD)
Windows 8.1
No touchscreen, no cd/dvd drive
My only complaints: The screen is not HD and has touchy viewing angles. No backlit keyboard. That's it!

It has been turned loose to a pre-teen every since Christmas. No problems, no lagging, no graphical issues. It runs all the 3D engines from Valve/Steam, Unreal, Frostbite, etc. Plays it everyday...for at least 2-3 hours.

I'm about to buy another one today...just for me. But Im upgrading the RAM to 16GB, and may get the full HD version.

*This page from technobrij.com helped A LOT (no affiliation)! Be sure to read all the specs and disregard their posted prices - shop around. Heres the link:

http://technobrij.com/best-gaming-laptops-under-1000-dollars/

*Others I considered:

2) Acer V17 VN7-791G-7484 "Nitro Black" edition: $999 at newegg.com
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 860M 2 GB GDDR5
Intel Core i7 4710HQ (2.50GHz)
16GB Memory
1TB HDD
17.3" 1920 x 1080
Windows 8.1
8X DVD-Super Multi Double-Layer Drive (M-DISC enabled)
3) Lenovo Y50-70 59421855-Black : $999 ($1500 reg price) at Lenovo's webstore:
http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/laptops/lenovo/y-series/y50/
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 860M - 4 GB GDDR5
Intel Core i7 4710HQ (2.50GHz)
16GB Memory
1TB HDD + 8GB SSD hybrid
15.6" 1920 x 1080 (full HD)
Windows 8.1
BEWARE: Lenovo has a non-HD screen option that is horrible.
Lenovo also has an option to upgrade your screen to 4k Ultra HD for a few hundred bucks. Since you are getting a discount, it May be worth it to get something on par with a retina screen. *They have other Y-50 models on sale. Check out the different ones.*



Tips and Helpful info:

#1 - Pick a good processor.

All "i7, i5, i3" are Not created equal. The 4th gen Intel "Haswell" chips seem to beat any AMD chip. Apple started putting Haswell Intel chips in all their computers last year.

a) Look for Intel i5 or i7 that start with a "4" . For example, the Intel i5 4210U (4th generation Haswell chip - the "4" denotes a Haswell chip). Haswell chips are extremely faster than their predecessors. Thats why my mid-grade graphics card performs so well.

In general (but not always):
i7= Higher-end
i5 = Midrange
i3 = Budget

b) Pay attention to the last 1-2 letters of the chip model. The i5 4210U - "U" is the "Ultrabook" model...not bad.
"HQ" - is a top model "High? Quad-core" (Q means "quad", but not sure about H )
"MQ" - is pretty awesome too "Mainstream/Mobile Quad"
"M" - is a little better than "U"; "Mainstream/mobile" (some call it "Mobile")

You may run into letters like "K" (for over-clocking), "T" and "S". These are lower level models you are more likely to see in budget PCs. "Y" is a lower level model found in tablets.

The "best" Intel Haswell chip is something like "Intel Iris XXXX". Not in our budget!


#2 - GRAPHICS CARDS:

This can be a mess, but I'll try to summarize. Try to stay away from "integrated" graphics. You want to aim for "dedicated". However, a lot of the Macs out there run on an integrated chip such as the "Intel HD4400" and do just fine.

But those are Macs, and they seem to have some kind of "Ju-Ju" that makes them work better than the sum of their parts.

*As a general rule, a better/faster CPU (especially Haswell chips ) can make up the difference of having a slower graphics card or integrated graphics chip.

Suggestions based on $1000 budget:

*Dedicated Graphics Cards

a) NVIDIA GeForce 860M (best in our budget, but still awesome)
b) NVIDIA GeForce 840M (very good, but far from best)
c) NVIDIA GeForce 750M, 760M (ok)
d) AMD Radeon R9 M275 (dont go lower)

(A newer 900 series NVIDIA model became more prevalent this month, but those are out of our price range.)

*Integrated Graphics

a) Intel HD4600 ( built-in to some Haswell chips)
b) AMD Radeon HD 8650M
c) Intel HD4400

(Again, these suggestions are based on a $1000 budget. Plus, I made sure everything I reseached was equivalent or better than what Apple uses in their newest machines)


Why not Apple? Why not buy a Mac? My primary reasons: lack of upgrading ability and small hard drives. They are super fast Solid State hard drives, but I have thumb flash drives as big as their ssd/hdd. Not impressed.

And yes, some of the higher end Macs give you easy acess to RAM, HDD, etc but those are out of the $1000 range. Another dead end.

Why not a MacBook Air? Those are around $1000, right? Well, they only have 11"-13" screens. Its like an iPad with a keyboard. As a designer, you need at least 15".

Macbook Pros have 15"-17" screens, but they get out of the $1000 range... real quick-like!
Dont forget to check out that technobrij.com link (no affiliation). I found it to be be very helpful!

Also, you can check the ratings, speeds, comparisons of any CPU and graphics card at http://www.NotebookCheck.net. Another excellent resource.



Good luck and I hope this helps!


- Blaine Wilkerson (GammaRay)
Twitter: @blainewilkerson
 
Last edited:

tunicata

Tunicate Tamer
Location
Brooklyn, NY
Rating - 100%
163   0   0
WOW, thanks for the detailed post Blaine. I appreciate the time that must have taken and your willingness to share your knowledge.

My bro did get a computer but ended up building his own. I helped him with the money, but it ended up being more like 1300. I'll have to check on the specs and I will post them here.

I can use some of this information for my own build of a desk top. I have a few pieces here and there and just have to scrounge up the time.
 

Sponsor Reefs

We're a FREE website, and we exist because of hobbyists like YOU who help us run this community.

Click here to sponsor $10:


Top