The Gigabyte P37X is a particularly powerful 17-inch gaming
laptop with a dual-SSD Raid array, fast quad-core CPU and Nvidia GTX
980M graphics card with 8GB of video memory.
With a 1080p
screen that delivers superb picture quality, the P37X brings the
experience of using a desktop PC to mobile computing.
Retailing
at about £1799 (around $2200, AU$2800), it's not exactly affordable,
but it's fairly competitive when compared with other gaming laptops,
which aren't at all the same thing as a portable computer used only for
light tasks such as word processing or Facebook.
Gaming laptop 101
Before
diving further into the specifics of Gigabyte's P37X gaming laptop,
it's worth explaining these differences between portable gaming
computers and normal laptops.
This corner of the wider
computing market caters for its own specific niche, and is intended for a
quite different usage scenario than your average Ultrabook or
general-purpose laptop. As a rule, gaming laptops aren't light or thin,
the battery life is awful and they cost a small fortune. Plenty of ports are on offerBut
in giving up those qualities, which are normally of utmost importance, a
gaming laptop can offer desktop-like 3D performance and high gaming
frame rates, by using components that are far more powerful than what's
usually offered.
With generally dire battery life, a
massive price tag and at times, less-than-elegant design, why would
anyone want such a gaming laptop? The short answer is that they're a
brilliant, convenient way to play PC games on the move, whether you want
to enjoy a game of Civilization 5 to while away the time on a long
journey, or to bring a gaming-capable PC to a friend's house for
networked gaming.
LAN gaming is a wholly different, more
fun, more sociable experience to playing PC games online, as all your
friends are very much in the same room, able to share jokes and pizza,
as well as the joint gaming experience.
No consolation
And
although consoles cater for this type of scenario as well, it's not at
all the same thing. Many gamers prefer playing on a PC with its own
dedicated display, rather than sharing a corner of a TV screen. It could
be for playing FPS games with a keyboard and mouse, a strategy game
that just doesn't work well on a console, or for one of the many
PC-exclusive titles (for example, World of Warcraft). While some may be
happy to bring their entire desktop PC and monitor to a friend's house,
or an organised event to enjoy LAN gaming, a gaming laptop is a more
civilised option.
Without the kind of powerful, high-end
components that come with a high-end gaming laptop like the P37X, you
won't be able to play at full resolution or enjoy most up-to-date gaming
titles with a constant 60 fps frame rate. It's these high-end
components that quickly suck a laptop battery dry, plus they output
considerable heat that requires heavy-duty cooling, not to mention
driving up the cost.
Weighing 2.7kg and measuring 22.5mm high, while still
relatively chunky and not exactly small enough to fit into a manila
envelope, the P37X is less hefty than a lot of competing gaming laptops
and mobile workstations. The design is refreshingly bland too, avoiding
the plethora of flashing lights and garish logo designs employed by some
manufacturers.
It's a portable monolith of
high-performance gaming hardware, one which looks like a normal laptop
in nearly every sense. The chassis is a nice dark gunmetal grey and it
all has a rather elegant feel.
With
the P37X, you get an Nvidia GeForce GTX 980M, the fastest single
discrete mobile GPU currently available, with 8GB of dedicated GDDR5
video memory. 8GB of video memory is still quite a luxury even for
desktop graphics, so finding it in a laptop is all the more
extraordinary, and should provide a good performance boost in games.
There's
a Haswell-based quad-core Intel Core i7-4720HQ processor, which runs at
2.6GHz but hits 3.6GHz in Turbo Mode, paired with a generous 16GB of
DDR3 main system memory, configured as a pair of 8GB sticks. There are
only two slots though, so upgrading further needs larger DIMMS, which
aren't currently available. The display is a thing of beauty
Superb screen
This
is a powerful specification that won't even break into a sweat when
playing Battlefield 4, but the real star is the display – a 17.3-inch
IPS panel that looks absolutely superb whatever angle it's viewed at.
For gaming, it's a lot better than a 14 or 15-inch screen, as it
provides a great view of the action, although such a large screen means
there's more chassis space to squeeze in components, battery and cooling
hardware.
It's only a 1080p-resolution screen rather
than 4K, and higher-resolution options are only available on Gigabyte's
(marginally) less powerful P35 laptop.
In some ways, that's a good thing. Even the meaty mobile specification
here is likely to struggle when running modern games at 4K resolution
and high detail, plus there's the possibly irritating issue of
less-than-perfect support for high-DPI on the Windows desktop.
There's
nothing wrong with 1080p, the desktop is guaranteed to always render at
the right size and it won't cause performance issues. It's a sensible
choice for gaming, and if you're desperate to play at 4K, you can
connect an external display to the DisplayPort 1.2 connector. You get an Ethernet port for online gaming
Plenty of storage
Storage
options vary depending on the P37X variant and customisation options
you choose. If you wish, the P37X can be fully loaded with four storage
devices, including internal space for a pair of mSATA drives that can be
set up in Raid 0, ranging from 128GB to 512GB, along with a 2.5-inch
drive, with another available if the hot-swappable DVD writer is
replaced with a caddy. If you want hard disks as well, up to 4TB can be
squeezed into the P37X, for a maximum of 5TB of internal storage.
There's also an option to put three SSDs into a Raid 0, not something
regularly offered on laptops.
The sample we reviewed came with a pair of 128GB mSATA SSDs, a 1TB hard disk and the optical drive in place.
There's
also 802.11ac wireless networking, via an Intel 7260 2x2 wireless
adaptor, which isn't the fastest wireless card you can get, but there's a
Gigabit Ethernet connector to fall back on. External displays are
catered for with HDMI, Mini DisplayPort and analogue D-Sub outputs, the
latter of which is still useful for compatibility with an enormous
number of legacy display devices.
Joining this list of
connectors on the P37X are two USB 3.0 and two USB 2.0 ports, an SD Card
reader, audio jack, and a Kensington lock. Underneath the screen are a
pair of 1.5W speakers and there's an HD webcam at the top. The WASD keys are highlighted
Keyboard highlights
With
the keyboard, the W, S, A and D keys, which every gamer knows are the
most important in FPS games, are somewhat pointlessly highlighted with a
white square. The entire keyboard is backlit though, and there are
programmable macro keys to the side, which many (but not all) gamers
find useful.
The use of type-friendly island-style keys
is predictable, given their near-universal pervasion in laptop design.
Although gamers often show preference for more chunky mechanical
keyboards, big and fat keys would have meant a thicker laptop chassis.
The
trackpad is nothing special. It's of average size, with the usual pair
of pressure-activated click buttons at the bottom. In my opinion,
nothing beats the feel of the trackpads on Apple's MacBooks, which is
somewhat helped by built-in support for gestures in OS X. Although
that's promised with Windows 10, some manufacturers have already
programmed their own trackpad gesture support into their software,
mimicking the multi-touch gesture in OS X, but this is something
Gigabyte hasn't done with the P37X.
It isn't a
show-stopping issue, since a traditional mouse works so much better in
most games anyway. You'd be sensible to pack one in your bag if you're
lugging the P37X to a friend's house to play FPS or strategy games.
With so much capable hardware lurking inside it, the P37X
really feels more like a desktop gaming system than a run-of-the-mill
laptop. Connect up the aforementioned mouse and you'll certainly be
racking up kills in Battlefield 4 in no time, with no danger of
suffering low frame rates.
You'll need to do some
immediate tinkering though, as I found when running benchmarks. When
spinning, the fans are incredibly noisy, and come on at seemingly random
moments, even when you might think the system is idle.
The
first port of call was to put the P37X in stealth mode via Gigabyte's
Smart Manager software, which also provides controls for on-screen
brightness and volume, the keyboard backlight and so on. Even in stealth
mode, there's a slight hum to the fans as they work to prevent
overheating, but it's bearable and only heard when you're running a
game.
But it also seems
that the P37X caps frame rates to save on battery life and heat output.
With the power disconnected or the fans set to stealth mode, the GPU is
under-clocked, and you're capped at 30fps. And when you're running it at
full speed, it's fair to say the P37X is one noisy computer. The P37X is relatively thin considering its power
Benchmarks
But with the fans set to auto, it delivers some very nice performance indeed. Here are the machine's benchmark results: Cinebench
CPU Multi Core: 636
CPU Single Core: 133
OpenGL: 91.71
3DMark
Fire Strike: 8207
Fire Strike Ultra: 2278
Sky Diver: 20761
Cloud Gate: 19951
Ice Storm: 121601
PCMark 08
Home: 3163
Accelerated: 3800
Battery Life: 3 hours 17 minutes
Middle Earth: Shadows of Mordor (Ultra detail setting, 1920 x 1080)
Min: 35.4 fps
Max: 120.54 fps
Average: 70.71fps
Middle Earth: Shadows of Mordor (High detail setting, 1920 x 1080)
Min: 48.5 fps
Max: 149.8 fps
Average: 92 fps
Metro Last Light (everything set to maximum, 16xAA, 1920 x 1080)
Min: 16.67 fps
Max: 69.39 fps
Average: 35.67 fps
These
tests are taxing on any system, and the results indicate more than
reasonable gaming performance. They're less than the average high-end
desktop gaming system, but at least competitive. Drop the detail down a
single notch, or try a less demanding game, and you won't have any
problems whatsoever.
General usage
Outside of
these tests though, the laptop feels buttery smooth in just about
anything. It's sure to have no problem whatsoever with non-gaming tasks.
Rendering video, applying image filters and so on will work
beautifully, and of course it's great for basic office tasks too. The
large screen provides a spacious desktop area to work in, although if
all you want is a portable computer for Facebook use or word processing a
gaming laptop such as this isn't the best choice. Battery life is pretty decent here, considering the componentsIn
the PCMark 08 battery life test, the results from the P37X were
surprisingly not bad. It lasted three hours 17 minutes with the
brightness set to 50% (more than viewable) and the fans set to stealth
mode.
Although this couldn't be regarded as superb
battery life, and pales in comparison to the average Ultrabook, it
really isn't so terrible for a laptop with a Geforce GTX 980, powerful
CPU running at 3.6GHz in Turbo Mode, and a large screen. In the same
test, Dell's Precision M3800, for example, lasted just two hours seven
minutes.
The PCMark 08 test is quite taxing on the system
as well, representing light-but-constant use. With playback of an
Avatar Blu-ray rip in Windows Media Player (I've found VLC to be a real
battery life hog), the P37X lasted four hours 12 minutes. Again, not a
bad result at all and more than enough to watch at least one film on a
long flight or train journey.
Disk performance from the
mSATA Raid array is excellent as well. I ran CrystalDiskMark and
measured 938.1MB/sec sequential read and 660.8MB/sec sequential write.
The read result is roughly in line with a pair of 2.5-inch desktop
drives in Raid 0, although the write speeds are a little lower,
explainable by being smaller mSATA drives.
The wireless
performance is not the greatest I've measured from 802.11ac routers,
which is as expected, since it's only a 2x2 adaptor. At short range I
recorded speeds of 328Mb/sec, well below that of most 3x3 antennas. But
with an Ethernet port provided as well, it's not the deal breaker it
might be on an ultra-slim laptop that relies solely on wireless. The fans are noisy when running full pelt
Further testing
With
a good physical build and design, great screen and excellent gaming
performance, the P37X is a gaming laptop worthy of recommendation, but I
felt the issue of the GPU being under-clocked when the fans are in
stealth mode required some further investigation.
I ran
the Unigine Heaven 4.0 benchmark, which shows not just the frame rate
but also the GPU temperature and memory clock speed. With the fans
running in stealth mode, once again, the frame rate was capped around
30fps, and the memory clock reading came out at 800MHz. The GPU
temperature hovered around 52 degrees Celsius.
Putting
the fans to automatic mode, the memory clock jumped to an effective
2500MHz, and the temperature went up to 72 degrees Celsius. The frame
rate then hit over 150 fps. Of course, the fans sound extremely loud in
this case. There may be a way to edit a registry key to manually set the
fans speed slightly lower to reduce noise, without reducing
performance, but I wasn't able to find this.
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